Product information "Metastatic Malignant Melanoma"
Clinical History
A 65-year-old male with a history of melanoma on his left foot (treated surgically and with radiotherapy) presented with left groin pain. He was cachexic, had a hard, enlarged liver and a discharging sinus in the groin surrounded by black nodules. He passed away from a hospital-acquired pneumonia.
Pathology
The excised proximal right femur showed numerous tumour deposits in the medullary cavity, varying from pale brown to black, destroying cancellous bone up to 3?cm in size. Cortical bone remained intact except for some discoloration at the neck-shaft junction. These are metastatic deposits from a skin melanoma.
Further Information
Melanoma is a malignant skin cancer linked to UV radiation exposure. Risk factors include fair complexion, numerous naevi, childhood sunburns, and immunosuppression. Although only about 5% of skin cancers, it has the highest mortality rate. It typically appears as a changing pigmented lesion with irregular borders, variegated colour and asymmetry.
Common mutations include CDKN2A, BRAF, PI3K and TERT. Immunotherapy that targets melanoma antigens shows promising results.
Melanoma often spreads to lungs, liver, brain, bone, and regional lymph nodes. Bone metastases occur in 25–50% of cases and often affect the axial skeleton, causing pain or pathological fractures. Diagnosis includes biopsy, blood tests (e.g., elevated ALP, calcium, LDH), and imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI, PET). Treatment is stage- and profile-dependent and includes surgery, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiotherapy or combinations.
A 65-year-old male with a history of melanoma on his left foot (treated surgically and with radiotherapy) presented with left groin pain. He was cachexic, had a hard, enlarged liver and a discharging sinus in the groin surrounded by black nodules. He passed away from a hospital-acquired pneumonia.
Pathology
The excised proximal right femur showed numerous tumour deposits in the medullary cavity, varying from pale brown to black, destroying cancellous bone up to 3?cm in size. Cortical bone remained intact except for some discoloration at the neck-shaft junction. These are metastatic deposits from a skin melanoma.
Further Information
Melanoma is a malignant skin cancer linked to UV radiation exposure. Risk factors include fair complexion, numerous naevi, childhood sunburns, and immunosuppression. Although only about 5% of skin cancers, it has the highest mortality rate. It typically appears as a changing pigmented lesion with irregular borders, variegated colour and asymmetry.
Common mutations include CDKN2A, BRAF, PI3K and TERT. Immunotherapy that targets melanoma antigens shows promising results.
Melanoma often spreads to lungs, liver, brain, bone, and regional lymph nodes. Bone metastases occur in 25–50% of cases and often affect the axial skeleton, causing pain or pathological fractures. Diagnosis includes biopsy, blood tests (e.g., elevated ALP, calcium, LDH), and imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI, PET). Treatment is stage- and profile-dependent and includes surgery, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiotherapy or combinations.
Erler-Zimmer
Erler-Zimmer GmbH & Co.KG
Hauptstrasse 27
77886 Lauf
Germany
info@erler-zimmer.de
Achtung! Medizinisches Ausbildungsmaterial, kein Spielzeug. Nicht geeignet für Personen unter 14 Jahren.
Attention! Medical training material, not a toy. Not suitable for persons under 14 years of age.