In Turkey, merkel Cell Carcinoma is managed by oncologists. Merkel cell carcinoma is a rare, aggressive neuroendocrine skin cancer driven in roughly 80% of cases by integration of Merkel cell polyomavirus into the host genome, with the remaining 20% caused by cumulative ultraviolet damage. US incidence has tripled over 25 years to about 2,500 cases per year, predominantly in older adults with chronic sun exposure or immunosuppression.

Merkel cell carcinoma (ICD-10: C4A) is a rare, aggressive cutaneous neuroendocrine malignancy arising from precursor cells thought to be related to dermal Merkel cells, the mechanoreceptors of the skin. In 2008, Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) was identified as the cause of approximately 80% of cases, with clonal viral integration and large T-antigen mutations driving uncontrolled proliferation. The remaining 20% of cases — more common in chronically sun-exposed skin of the head and neck — show very high tumor mutational burden from cumulative ultraviolet damage. AJCC 8th edition staging ranges from stage I (≤2 cm, node-negative) through stage IV (distant metastatic disease).
The key symptoms of Merkel Cell Carcinoma are: A rapidly growing, painless skin nodule that doubles in size over weeks — the most distinctive feature, as benign skin lesions typically grow slowly., Red, pink, or violet color of the lesion, often with a smooth dome shape and shiny overlying skin., Location on chronically sun-exposed sites: head and neck (50%), upper limbs (35%), lower limbs (15%) — the AEIOU mnemonic captures this presentation., Firm, dermal-based feel rather than an obviously surface (epidermal) lesion; the nodule appears to sit deeper in the skin., Lack of pain, itching, or ulceration in early disease — patients often delay presentation because the lesion does not hurt., Regional lymphadenopathy in the draining nodal basin, palpable in 25-30% of patients at diagnosis and occult on sentinel biopsy in another 30%., Multiple satellite lesions in the surrounding skin in some patients, reflecting in-transit metastatic spread..

Merkel cell carcinoma is often misdiagnosed clinically because a small, asymptomatic skin nodule can resemble a cyst, lipoma, or amelanotic melanoma. Definitive diagnosis requires skin biopsy with histopathology and immunohistochemistry. The 2024 NCCN Merkel Cell Carcinoma Guidelines recommend punch or excisional biopsy with hematoxylin-eosin stain plus a panel of immunohistochemical markers: CK20 (positive in approximately 90%, with the characteristic perinuclear dot pattern), neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin, chromogranin A, and CD56 — to confirm neuroendocrine differentiation and exclude metastatic small cell lung cancer (TTF-1 is negative in MCC and positive in pulmonary small cell). Merkel cell polyomavirus status can be assessed by immunohistochemistry for the large T-antigen, with prognostic and predictive implications. Once diagnosis is confirmed, complete staging follows: full-skin examination for satellite or in-transit lesions, palpation of the draining nodal basin, and sentinel lymph node biopsy at the time of wide local excision in clinically node-negative patients (positive in approximately 30%, dictating regional therapy). Whole-body PET-CT or CT chest, abdomen, and pelvis is recommended at diagnosis for stage II and above and for any clinical concern of distant disease. MRI of the brain is performed when neurologic symptoms or stage IV disease are present. Baseline blood work includes complete blood count, liver function tests, and an LDH that supports prognostication.
Prognosis in Merkel cell carcinoma is closely tied to AJCC stage at diagnosis. Five-year overall survival is approximately 51% for localized disease (stages I-II), 35-40% for regional nodal disease (stage III), and historically 14% for distant metastatic disease. The single largest change in this landscape has come from immune checkpoint inhibitors: pembrolizumab in first-line stage IV disease achieved a 3-year overall survival of 59% in KEYNOTE-017, and avelumab produces durable responses in roughly one-third of treated patients. Within each stage, MCPyV-positive tumors generally carry slightly better prognosis than UV-driven tumors, partly due to higher viral antigen expression and immunogenicity. Recurrence after curative-intent surgery and radiation occurs in 30-40% of patients overall, with the highest risk in the first 2 years; routine clinical surveillance is therefore intensive in that window. Immunosuppressed patients (transplant, CLL, HIV) have worse stage-matched outcomes, reflecting impaired immune control of residual disease. Death from MCC remains predominantly due to distant recurrence rather than local failure when adjuvant radiation has been used. Patient age, performance status, comorbidities, and tumor size on the trunk versus head and neck also independently influence survival.
Merkel cell carcinoma should always be managed by a multidisciplinary team including a surgical oncologist or dermatologic surgeon, medical oncologist, and radiation oncologist with MCC experience. The disease is rare enough that fewer than 10% of US oncologists see more than five cases in a career, making referral to a high-volume center an evidence-supported quality measure. Pathology should be reviewed at a reference center when local diagnosis is uncertain.
Find specialists →After wide local excision, sutures are removed at 7-14 days and full healing of the surgical site takes 4-8 weeks. Adjuvant radiation, when given, starts within 4-8 weeks of surgery and runs daily on weekdays for 5-6 weeks; skin reactions peak 1-2 weeks after the last dose and settle over 4-8 weeks. Immunotherapy is continued for up to 2 years in responders, with disease assessment every 8-12 weeks by imaging. Surveillance visits continue every 3-6 months for the first 2 years, every 6-12 months for years 3-5, and annually thereafter for those without recurrence.
Maintain or resume regular exercise as tolerated during and after treatment — at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity weekly and two sessions of resistance training, per American Cancer Society guidelines. After surgery, avoid heavy lifting for 2-4 weeks; after axillary or inguinal node dissection, restrict heavy lifting on the affected limb for 4-6 weeks and monitor for lymphedema. Light walking can usually resume within days of most procedures.
Look for a National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center or comparable specialist center with a dedicated cutaneous oncology program. Confirm that sentinel lymph node biopsy is available at the same institution as wide local excision. Ask about access to immunotherapy and to ongoing MCC clinical trials. For elderly patients with comorbidities, prioritize centers with geriatric oncology input. Tertiary academic centers are generally preferred over community practice for any patient with stage II or higher disease.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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