› Forums › Cutaneous Melanoma Community › How to live with the thought of having melanoma?
- This topic has 27 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 1 month ago by
bonusfries.
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- April 5, 2015 at 4:45 am
I am 35 years old male, who was recently diagnosed with Melanoma in Situ in February 6th 2015.
I had my surgery done, and got my final results. All margins are clear. Even though that my doctors told me that it was just on the surface of the skin, I still have fear and questions. In 2014 I helped my mother to fight breast cancer, and year later I have been diagnosed with my Cancer. I hate that!
Thanks?
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- April 5, 2015 at 10:30 am
I am so glad they got it all. So good you got it early. Keep vigilant now. As many times on this forum I have read about ppl like me who had a small melanoma removed and 10 years later it's in their lung or another organ. Just beware of any sign of a return. Take care and use it as a reminder to enjoy every moment of your life
anne-Louise
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- April 5, 2015 at 10:30 am
I am so glad they got it all. So good you got it early. Keep vigilant now. As many times on this forum I have read about ppl like me who had a small melanoma removed and 10 years later it's in their lung or another organ. Just beware of any sign of a return. Take care and use it as a reminder to enjoy every moment of your life
anne-Louise
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- April 5, 2015 at 10:30 am
I am so glad they got it all. So good you got it early. Keep vigilant now. As many times on this forum I have read about ppl like me who had a small melanoma removed and 10 years later it's in their lung or another organ. Just beware of any sign of a return. Take care and use it as a reminder to enjoy every moment of your life
anne-Louise
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:46 pm
Even though it sucks to get melanoma, if one is going to get it, yours is the best kind to have. Check out this link from the aimatmelanoma website: https://www.aimatmelanoma.org/stages-of-melanoma/stage-0-in-situ-melanoma/stage-0-follow-up/ and you will see that "When melanoma is found and treated early, the chances for long-term, disease-free survival are excellent. With treatment, patients with melanoma in situ have a 5- and 10-year overall survival rate of 99%-100%.1".
So like Jubes said, be vigilant and make sure to be seen annually by a dermatologist.
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:46 pm
Even though it sucks to get melanoma, if one is going to get it, yours is the best kind to have. Check out this link from the aimatmelanoma website: https://www.aimatmelanoma.org/stages-of-melanoma/stage-0-in-situ-melanoma/stage-0-follow-up/ and you will see that "When melanoma is found and treated early, the chances for long-term, disease-free survival are excellent. With treatment, patients with melanoma in situ have a 5- and 10-year overall survival rate of 99%-100%.1".
So like Jubes said, be vigilant and make sure to be seen annually by a dermatologist.
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:46 pm
Even though it sucks to get melanoma, if one is going to get it, yours is the best kind to have. Check out this link from the aimatmelanoma website: https://www.aimatmelanoma.org/stages-of-melanoma/stage-0-in-situ-melanoma/stage-0-follow-up/ and you will see that "When melanoma is found and treated early, the chances for long-term, disease-free survival are excellent. With treatment, patients with melanoma in situ have a 5- and 10-year overall survival rate of 99%-100%.1".
So like Jubes said, be vigilant and make sure to be seen annually by a dermatologist.
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:48 pm
I've been on this forum for about 20 months. While you do sometimes see the (statistically unlikely) situation of Stage I melanoma progressing to a later stage, I don't ever recall anyone reporting advancing from melanoma in situ. Congratulations on catching it early and please do your best to move on with life.
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:48 pm
I've been on this forum for about 20 months. While you do sometimes see the (statistically unlikely) situation of Stage I melanoma progressing to a later stage, I don't ever recall anyone reporting advancing from melanoma in situ. Congratulations on catching it early and please do your best to move on with life.
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- April 5, 2015 at 7:48 pm
I've been on this forum for about 20 months. While you do sometimes see the (statistically unlikely) situation of Stage I melanoma progressing to a later stage, I don't ever recall anyone reporting advancing from melanoma in situ. Congratulations on catching it early and please do your best to move on with life.
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- April 6, 2015 at 2:58 pm
The best advise I can give is to stay off the internet. Anxiety will continue to rise the more you research, and not in proportion to the risk. Most people with in situ go on to live normal lives and never post again. The majority of new cases are in situ so you are in good company. The Internet is not a representative sample of prognosis for you. Live life! Be sun smart! Visit your derm and watch other moles for change!
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- April 6, 2015 at 2:58 pm
The best advise I can give is to stay off the internet. Anxiety will continue to rise the more you research, and not in proportion to the risk. Most people with in situ go on to live normal lives and never post again. The majority of new cases are in situ so you are in good company. The Internet is not a representative sample of prognosis for you. Live life! Be sun smart! Visit your derm and watch other moles for change!
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- April 6, 2015 at 2:58 pm
The best advise I can give is to stay off the internet. Anxiety will continue to rise the more you research, and not in proportion to the risk. Most people with in situ go on to live normal lives and never post again. The majority of new cases are in situ so you are in good company. The Internet is not a representative sample of prognosis for you. Live life! Be sun smart! Visit your derm and watch other moles for change!
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- April 7, 2015 at 3:00 am
I was diagnosed with melanoma in situ in 1974 when I was 16 years old. It was on my back and they performed a WLE and a skin graft. I am now 57 with no recurrence and no new primary sites to date even though I have had many suspicious moles removed over the years. So I think you can be pretty confident that there will be no progression of melanoma from in situ status. Back then I knew so little about melanoma and being a teenager I thought I was invincible so just went on with my life after the surgery. Routinely check your skin for any changes and spend the rest of your time enjoying your life. It goes by way too fast.
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- April 7, 2015 at 3:00 am
I was diagnosed with melanoma in situ in 1974 when I was 16 years old. It was on my back and they performed a WLE and a skin graft. I am now 57 with no recurrence and no new primary sites to date even though I have had many suspicious moles removed over the years. So I think you can be pretty confident that there will be no progression of melanoma from in situ status. Back then I knew so little about melanoma and being a teenager I thought I was invincible so just went on with my life after the surgery. Routinely check your skin for any changes and spend the rest of your time enjoying your life. It goes by way too fast.
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- April 7, 2015 at 8:44 am
THESE are the stories there aren't enough of – but I love to read. The ones about being diagnosed in 1974 at age 16 and no recurrence and no new primary! There are so many to read about with recurrence, I love to see the ones like this, thanks for posting, the more I read these, the more it helps me calm down!
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- April 7, 2015 at 8:44 am
THESE are the stories there aren't enough of – but I love to read. The ones about being diagnosed in 1974 at age 16 and no recurrence and no new primary! There are so many to read about with recurrence, I love to see the ones like this, thanks for posting, the more I read these, the more it helps me calm down!
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- April 7, 2015 at 1:47 pm
That is the thing about this board. Most of the people here are the unlucky few who's melanoma progressed. But that is not the case for the vast majority of cases, especially in situ like you. People don't tend to hang out here unless they are dealing with melanoma day to day. So the ones like yourself with in situ that find their way here don't hang out for long and just get on with their lives (which is exactly what they should do!).
The likelihood that you become one of us is super small. So go out there and have a great life, just be careful with the sun and get those annual skin checks.
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- April 7, 2015 at 1:47 pm
That is the thing about this board. Most of the people here are the unlucky few who's melanoma progressed. But that is not the case for the vast majority of cases, especially in situ like you. People don't tend to hang out here unless they are dealing with melanoma day to day. So the ones like yourself with in situ that find their way here don't hang out for long and just get on with their lives (which is exactly what they should do!).
The likelihood that you become one of us is super small. So go out there and have a great life, just be careful with the sun and get those annual skin checks.
-
- April 7, 2015 at 1:47 pm
That is the thing about this board. Most of the people here are the unlucky few who's melanoma progressed. But that is not the case for the vast majority of cases, especially in situ like you. People don't tend to hang out here unless they are dealing with melanoma day to day. So the ones like yourself with in situ that find their way here don't hang out for long and just get on with their lives (which is exactly what they should do!).
The likelihood that you become one of us is super small. So go out there and have a great life, just be careful with the sun and get those annual skin checks.
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- April 7, 2015 at 8:44 am
THESE are the stories there aren't enough of – but I love to read. The ones about being diagnosed in 1974 at age 16 and no recurrence and no new primary! There are so many to read about with recurrence, I love to see the ones like this, thanks for posting, the more I read these, the more it helps me calm down!
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- April 7, 2015 at 3:00 am
I was diagnosed with melanoma in situ in 1974 when I was 16 years old. It was on my back and they performed a WLE and a skin graft. I am now 57 with no recurrence and no new primary sites to date even though I have had many suspicious moles removed over the years. So I think you can be pretty confident that there will be no progression of melanoma from in situ status. Back then I knew so little about melanoma and being a teenager I thought I was invincible so just went on with my life after the surgery. Routinely check your skin for any changes and spend the rest of your time enjoying your life. It goes by way too fast.
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- April 8, 2015 at 2:19 am
See your derma regularly, follow safe sun practices, and the percentages are very, very tilted in your favor that this is the only time you will have to deal with this. Good luck!
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- April 8, 2015 at 2:19 am
See your derma regularly, follow safe sun practices, and the percentages are very, very tilted in your favor that this is the only time you will have to deal with this. Good luck!
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- April 8, 2015 at 2:19 am
See your derma regularly, follow safe sun practices, and the percentages are very, very tilted in your favor that this is the only time you will have to deal with this. Good luck!
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