Skip to main content
Cancer Explained
Biopsy & pathology

What does Close margin mean on a pathology report?

A close margin means cancer cells are near the edge of the removed tissue but not right at it. Teams weigh how close is close for each cancer type. Ask whether the distance changes anything about your plan.

Also written as

  • close margins
Read the full plain-language guide: Negative and close margins

Please read: This page explains general report language and cannot interpret your personal report, diagnose a condition, judge how serious a result is, or recommend treatment. Only your care team can do that.

How to read biopsy & pathology results

A pathology report describes what a specialist saw when they looked at your tissue under a microscope. Each phrase — the cell type, how abnormal the cells look, the margins, and features like invasion — is one piece of a larger picture, and pathologists often add comments or order extra stains before reaching a conclusion. A single word rarely decides anything on its own; it is read together with your imaging, your other results, and how you are doing. The team who requested the biopsy is who can tell you what a finding means for your care.

Questions to ask your care team

  • What type of cells were found, and what does that mean for me?
  • Are the margins clear — and if not, what happens next?
  • Do any of these findings change my treatment options?
  • Is any further testing, or a second look at the slides, worth doing?
Build your own question list

Related biopsy & pathology terms

Have a whole report in front of you?

Paste your whole report — or look up any other single term — and the decoder explains every phrase it recognizes in plain language. It runs entirely in your browser, so your text never leaves your device.

How this page was created

Cancer Explained uses AI to organize and translate information from the authoritative sources cited on each page. Automated checks review claims, citations, clarity, duplication, and potential safety concerns before publication. Our content is not currently reviewed by physicians unless a specific qualified reviewer is named on the page. Cancer Explained provides general education and should not replace advice from your healthcare team.

Editorial status: Source verified This page was created with AI assistance and checked against the sources listed on it. Source checking is not a medical review.

Human medical review: not completed. At this time, most Cancer Explained content has not been reviewed by a physician or other healthcare professional. Pages with documented human medical review identify the reviewer, credentials, and review date directly.

Read more about our editorial process, our use of AI, and our corrections policy.

Spotted a problem? Report an error — a factual mistake, broken or outdated source, confusing wording, or anything that seems unsafe. Please do not include names, medical record numbers, dates of birth, addresses, or other identifying medical information in your report.

After using this page, do you understand what to do next?

Anonymous — we only record the answer, never who gave it.