History
Although
melanoma is not a new disease, evidence for its occurrence in antiquity
is rather scarce. However, one example lies in a 1960s examination of
nine Peruvian Inca mummies, radiocarbon dated to be approximately 2400
years old, which showed apparent signs of melanoma: melanotic masses
in the skin and diffuse metastases to the bones.
John
Hunter is reported to be the first to operate on metastatic melanoma
in 1787. Although not knowing precisely what it was, he described it
as a "cancerous fungous excrescence". The excised tumor was
preserved in the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of
England. It was not until 1968 that microscopic examination of the specimen
revealed it to be an example of metastatic melanoma.
The
French physician René Laennec was the first to describe melanoma
as a disease entity. His report was initially presented during a lecture
for the Faculté de Médecine de Paris in 1804 and then
published as a bulletin in 1806. The first English language report of
melanoma was presented by an English general practitioner from Stourbridge,
William Norris in 1820. In his later work in 1857 he remarked that there
is a familial predisposition for development of melanoma (Eight Cases
of Melanosis with Pathological and Therapeutical Remarks on That Disease).
The
first formal acknowledgment of advanced melanoma as untreatable came
from Samuel Cooper in 1840. He stated that the only chance for benefit
depends upon the early removal of the disease ...'More than one and
a half centuries later this situation remains largely unchanged.
In 1956, Australian professor Henry
Oliver Lancaster discovered that melanomas were directly associated
with latitude (ie, intensity of sunlight); and that exposure to the
sun was a very high factor in the development of the cancer[citation
needed].