In patients with a history of melanoma, the risk of recurrence depends on the stage at diagnosis. Patients who present with more advanced disease are more likely to experience recurrence; patients with less advanced disease at presentation have slower progression and lower likelihood of recurrence. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of a minimally invasive and targeted technique as a diagnostic and therapeutic tool for the excision of nonpalpable lesions suspected to be melanoma metastases. The authors evaluated 21 patients with stage IIB, IIC, or III melanoma and subcutaneous nonpalpable lesions with a high risk of malignancy on positron emission tomography/computed tomography scan during oncologic follow-up. To guide biopsy, the authors used the radioguided occult lesion localization technique, using intralesional injection of technetium-99m albumin macroaggregates the day before surgery. During surgery, a handheld gamma probe was used to locate the lesions. Surgical localization of radiolabeled lesions was achieved in all cases. Relapsed melanoma was histologically confirmed in 13 patients. This technique proved to be a simple, safe, and effective method to detect and biopsy nonpalpable or difficult-to-locate lesions in suspected metastatic melanoma. The main advantage was disease restaging (eg, from stage II to III), allowing patients to access adjuvant therapies not approved as early-stage melanoma treatment. Therapeutic, IV.
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