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Carbon dioxide laser ablation as an alternative treatment for cutaneous metastases from malignant melanoma.

Surgical excision of cutaneous malignant melanoma metastases is practical only when the number of lesions is small. In some patients isolated limb perfusion is not possible or fails to achieve control, and carbon dioxide laser ablation is then an alternative treatment. Between September 1992 and September 1994, 19 patients aged 45-94 years were treated with carbon dioxide laser. Two patients had received no previous limb perfusion, while the remaining 17 had up to three previous perfusions. The number of lesions per patient ranged from three to 40 nodules. A Sharplan 1030 portable carbon dioxide laser was used, which generates a beam wavelength of 10.6 microns and has a maximum power output of 80 W. All procedures were carried out under general anaesthesia. Each lesion was destroyed with a focused laser beam of 10-20 W with a spot size of 0.5-1.0 mm. At a mean follow-up of 15 months, five patients have died from the disease. Among the 14 survivors, eight have had no limb recurrence of the disease, three have had one further treatment and three a further two treatments to control cutaneous metastases at new sites. Early experience suggests that carbon dioxide laser ablation of cutaneous metastases is an effective palliative treatment after failed isolated limb perfusion, and there may be a group of patients in whom laser ablation should be the initial treatment of choice.

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