Excisional biopsy or definitive excision is used for concerning pigmented lesions, selected keratinocyte cancers after diagnostic confirmation, and some benign growths causing symptoms. Canadian primary-care clinicians follow dermatology referral pathways for lesions with high malignant potential or complex facial/subunit anatomy. Patient education on melanoma awareness is supported by resources such as the Canadian Dermatology Association public pages.

We discuss scar trade-offs, wound care, nerve injury risks near cosmetically sensitive areas, and pathology turnaround.

What This Service Includes

Lesion assessment

ABCDE melanoma cues, dermoscopy when available, prior biopsy results.

Design & anesthesia

Respect relaxed skin tension lines where feasible; local anesthetic field block.

Repair & pathology

Deep dermal + cuticular closure; specimen orientation marked if needed.

What to Expect

1

Consent & prep

Anticoagulants, allergies, expected scar, pathology fees (if uninsured portions).

2

Excise

Full-thickness specimen to fat or appropriate depth per lesion type.

3

Close & counsel

Suture removal timing, activity limits, signs of infection.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes—all excisions create a linear scar; technique minimizes tension and dog-ears where possible.

Typically 1–3 weeks depending on lab; we contact you about benign versus actionable findings.

Protect the healing wound from UV to reduce hyperpigmentation; follow our dressing plan.

Re-excision versus Mohs or plastic surgery referral depends on diagnosis and location—planned with you.