Posts Tagged ‘Detection’

Love the One You’re With

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In a recent post, I suggested having winter or summer vacations be your “calendar reminder” of times to do skin self-examinations and book your MoleSafe annual check-ups. But I liked the idea that the Skin Cancer Foundation posted last week for Valentine’s Day: a mutual skin exam. Nothing says I love you more than scrutinizing your partner from scalp to toes!

In all seriousness, Melanoma Updates has also noted back in October that Harvard School of Public Health wanted to encourage more primary care physicians be trained in looking out for melanomas while they happened to be examining other parts of the body. Makes sense to me. So, it makes sense to me that if you’re at all uncomfortable having a full body skin-exam that you could at least start by having your loved one give you a naked eye once-over for spots and dots you can’t see yourself. As the Skin Cancer Foundation’s post points out, “patients themselves detect about half of all melanomas.” They also have a terrific self-exam how-to posted on their site.

As they also note, it doesn’t replace a doctor’s examination, especially one trained in the use of a dermatoscope.

image of dermatoscope

image of dermatoscope

But we are all about moving skin cancer prevention forward, and keeping loved ones around for as long as possible.

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Love the One You're With

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In a recent post, I suggested having winter or summer vacations be your “calendar reminder” of times to do skin self-examinations and book your MoleSafe annual check-ups.  But I liked the idea that the Skin Cancer Foundation posted last week for Valentine’s Day: a mutual skin exam. Nothing says I love you more than scrutinizing your partner from scalp to toes!

In all seriousness, Melanoma Updates has also noted back in October that Harvard School of Public Health wanted to encourage more primary care physicians be trained in looking out for melanomas while they happened to be examining other parts of the body.  Makes sense to me.  So, it makes sense to me that if you’re at all uncomfortable having a full body skin-exam that you could at least start by having your loved one give you a naked eye once-over for spots and dots you can’t see yourself. As the Skin Cancer Foundation’s post points out, “patients themselves detect about half of all melanomas.” They also have a terrific self-exam how-to posted on their site.

As they also note, it doesn’t replace a doctor’s examination, especially one trained in the use of a dermatoscope.

image of dermatoscope

image of dermatoscope

But we are all about moving skin cancer prevention forward, and keeping loved ones around for as long as possible.

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Guest Post: A Patient POV

Friday, January 29th, 2010

MoleSafe customer and blogger, E.B. Moss, as our guest blogger, on her experience at MoleSafe in Millburn.

As a "woman of a certain age,” I am used to getting the recommended regular medical tests and checks. But I didn’t know there was more to a skin exam than the occasional inspection done by my dermatologist, when I remembered to even book those check-ups. I was proud of myself for being a little more vigilant than many I know – who had never even done a skin exam let alone been checked between the toes, for example! I felt ahead of the curve by comparison.

Then the experience of two different friends gave me a head’s up about ways to get a better head-to-toe scan. My friend Leslie, who has a lot of "beauty marks,” lives near the Millburn location of MoleSafe and had gotten full body scans and “molemapping” for herself and even her children. (I found out that skin cancers are on the rise among kids – especially teenage girls who have been allowed to use tanning salons.)
(I cringe when I think of us using those sunlamps as kids.)

I was thinking about checking out the place and then I bumped into my friend Carol, who had just gotten back from a follow up exam since her bout with melanoma a few years ago. Her cancer had actually been spotted by a woman standing behind her on a ticket line. Carol had had a sleeveless shirt on, and a woman tapped her on the shoulder and said, "pardon me for intruding, but has anyone ever checked out the mole on the back of your arm?…” Carol was vaguely aware of it, but it wasn’t in a place she could easily see. She decided to see the doctor…and a surgery with 16 stitches inside and 16 stitches outside basically saved her life the next week.

That was enough coincidence to send me to MoleSafe to see for myself…and have someone see ME better than I could myself! I spoke to Dr. Richard Bezozo, who invited me in so I could help share the experience with my readers. Bascially, MoleSafe is a three-prong protocol for screening: "Total Body Photography, total digital dermoscopy and digital sequential monitoring.” Apparently, that’s the gold standard for screenings that most dermatologists in the rest of the world recommend. We’re behind the curve in the good old US of A for being progressive in prevention. And it’s not like this is an invasive protocol.

Anyway, here’s what happens:

First, the place is clean, nice, and comfortable (and right near the train from NY.) You get down to your skivvies (you can keep a paper gown on, but I figured mole mapping is once a year and very important, so might as well go for the semi-full monty.) The exam room has a mat that looks like something from an old-fashioned dance lesson (or these days like a Dance Mat from Wii!)

My very reassuring nurse/"moleographer” had me take a stance with my feet in the position indicated on the mat with hands akimbo (I think that means hands on hip? but I always wanted to be able to use that word in a blog). dance_stepsShe took a set of images that way, then a set of images on the otherside, feet in the opposite position.

Then we sat down at her desk while she uploaded the super high res images, then coordinated the pictures to points on a computer image of a body. It was like creating a constellation on paper. I could immediately understand how the consistency of taking the same position on the mat year after year is a lot more efficient than random poses and "eyeballing” things. My molegrapher then carefully did a visual exam of moles that caught her eye and captured those with a dermatoscope – it’s a super magnifying camera with a special light that really shows details of specific moles. She uploaded those images, also correlated on the computer to the ones she’d marked on the figure.
It was fascinating to see super enlargements of my skin on the computer. You might find out that there are some that are "interesting” – and might be reassured about others…but all of them are sent electronically (yes, safe and encrypted) to a sort of radiologist/dermatologist who reviews the dermatascope images professionally.

You get a lovely CD of your body mole images to take home and give to your dermatologist. Then, a week or two later you have a report from the specialist sent to you.

The thing is, MoleSafe doesn’t do any surgeries or removals, so dermatologists are still involved in the whole process. I guess It’s like sending a person for an MRI and having then having them come back to the doctor to get treated for the broken leg or tumor or whatever. We need to be our own patient advocates and seek out MoleSafe on our own…or bring it to the attention of our doctors. You can go get one without a referral, and some insurance will cover it when you submit the receipt for reimbursement. Some won’t. But it’s an investment in your life compared to the approach most dermatologists have been using for the past 50 years.

So, I recommend you get on board. Or, get on mat, I guess.

PS: The good news is that I am a-okay, but have a much better sense of what to look for, where to look for it, and why.

PSS: MoleSafe is opening at NYU on 2/3. That should be the eye-opener a lot of people need about the value and legitimacy of this kind of protocol.

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Melanoma Shows no Favorites

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

The wealthy or the poor. African American or Caucasian. Melanoma is non-discriminating. Two news stories this past week showed just how this assassin has no loyalties.

FDR and Melanoma

In a new book, "F.D.R.’s Deadly Secret,” by neurologist Dr. Steven Lomazow, and journalist Eric Fettmann, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s death is hypothesized to have been from melanoma. The authors point out various symptoms and medical/political cover-ups, most specifically a disappearing mole in photos over the years.

The book has served to create additional speculation even if it still has not unshrouded the mystery to the satisfaction of many historians. But it has also served to do what we try to do here at Melanoma Updates as well: increase awareness of the deadly trajectory of late or undiagnosed melanomas.

Equal Opportunity Disease

Other melanoma news this week that is more substantiated was about the disparity in skin cancer diagnoses and deaths among Hispanics and African Americans

While the actual incidents of skin cancers and melanomas are lower, African Americans are more than twice as likely as Caucasians to have a melanoma that had spread “regionally or to distant parts of their bodies” at the time of diagnosis. Based on a study of 41,000 cases of melanoma diagnosed in Florida between 1990 and 2004, 12% of white non-Hispanic patients had advanced cancer by the time they were given a diagnosis, 18 % of Hispanic patients and 26% of black patients were at this later stage, when the cancer had already spread.

Granted, the study was based in sun-drenched Florida, but the study’s authors feel a contributing factor may be that Hispanics and blacks might put off seeing a doctor about melanoma lesions because they’re under the impression it’s a whites-only disease. As written in NewsOK:

They’re mostly right, but not completely: … According to the National Cancer Institute’s online database, 28.9 of every 100,000 white men are diagnosed with melanoma, and 18.7 of every 100,000 for white women. For Hispanic men and women, the rates are 4.7 and 4.6; for blacks, it’s 1.1 and 1. Overall, the median diagnosis age is 59.

But the survival rate for whites has gone from 68 percent in the early 1970s to 92 percent in recent years, the study says. “Such advances, however, have not occurred in other racial and ethnic groups in the United States.

And, as summed up in The New York Times version of the story:

"The simple message is that even though blacks and Hispanics are at lower risk, they can still get melanoma, but there seems to be a lack of awareness, so they’re diagnosed at a later stage,” said Dr. Robert S. Kirsner, the paper’s senior author and vice chairman of dermatology at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

The takeaway? Everyone still has to be vigilant.

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News and more News

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

I recently read a press release from a company that did a good job reminding people about the outdated methods that skin cancer screenings still rely upon.

They wrote:

[each year more than 60,000 Americans] will have been diagnosed with melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, according to the American Cancer Society. When early detection is key to survival, thorough and accurate skin cancer screenings become one’s first line of defense. But what do you do if you discover today’s standard screening isn’t as efficient and reliable as it could be? …you seek out a better way.

Agreed.

They went on to tout their newest technology, in the form of a cordless digital imaging device that uses LED lighting and a fixed-zoom lens to produce consistent, reliable images during skin cancer screenings. I’m happy for them, and happy to have a little competition because that can only help to raise awareness and offer more than just the old “naked eye exams” and improve the prognosis for those with a melanoma diagnosis.

And I also have to say this is what MoleSafe has offered for years – both in New Zealand and Australia, and finally with increasing popularity in the United States. Only MoleSafe takes it farther, by offering the world’s only complete melanoma early detection and surveillance program. In addition, for locations unable to provide the MoleSafe program, or for teaching practices, or even in cases where physicians only have a couple of areas of concern, MoleSafe’s New Zealand partner recently released a streamlined upgraded program.

MoleSafe’s new dermoscopic camera for melanoma screenings offers optimum simplicity, consistency and digital quality.

MoleSafe’s new dermoscopic camera for melanoma screenings offers optimum simplicity, consistency and digital quality.

Really big news?

This new program will be used for the first time in MoleSafe’s newest location opening soon at a University location in New York. (Details to come!)

MORE Big News?

MoleSafe has always been a tireless advocate of ways to better enable physicians to find, analyze and document lesions. And we’ve added another new tool to help do just that. In my last post, I mentioned the recent conference I attended of the International Dermoscopy Society. Well, we’re honored that MoleSafe was considered to be the “gold standard” by so many presenting researchers and physicians. They were, quite honestly, “blown away” by the newest of our products:

We unveiled a brand new touch-screen at the Barcelona conference, a tool that will revolutionize the workflow for dermatologists in their practice.

The screen is ideally mounted on the wall directly over the patient’s exam table. Then, just like sliding images on an iPhone — or like they do on CNN these days! — the doctor simply has to touch the panel to advance images, and can then easily show and educate the patient on what he or she is reviewing, and what the patient should be mindful of keeping an eye on as well.

Plus, by incorporating the MoleSafe proprietary View technology software right into the flat touchscreen computer, it enables the doctor to look at the images, then look directly at the suspect mole, without having to go to a desktop computer and review records. It’s all together, and all there in spectacular, hi-res digital detail…truly helping workflow and patient communication.

We are truly excited by all advances in our field, and only hope to embrace more newcomers, because that’s what it will take to keep opening eyes and demonstrating that there really is a better way to screen for and detect melanoma early.

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The TRICK to Early Skin Cancer Detection

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Halloween is a time when we all want to have fun, but a time to remind the kids about safety, too.

  • Head out in groups, never alone.
  • Don’t accept unwrapped food items.
  • Look both ways when crossing the street and never get in a car with a stranger.
  • Keep the flashlight handy.
  • And the hardest trick for kids (and sometimes adults) to learn?: don’t eat all your candy at once!

It’s a good time for grown-ups to practice safety measures, too.

Take off Your Costume! Halloween Friends

Sure skin cancer is a scary subject, but there are some tricks to staying ahead of it.

First? Take off your costume. And all your clothes, for that matter!

Checking your skin means taking regular reviews of all the spots and dots on your body: moles, freckles and, yes, those little treats, “age spots.” Things change, and you’re the one who sees your skin the most. Of course it’s even better to do a buddy check with your partner. The American Academy of Dermatology has a handy how-to you can print out for checking yourself out. Then, if you see any kind of change on one of your spots, don’t be afraid; just get it checked out.

The Ugly Duckling

Remember the children’s picture game we would play, “Which of these things is not like the other?” When taking a gander at your body, look for the ugly duckling – the mark or mole that stands out and looks different from the others, especially if it falls under the ABCDE’s of Melanoma.

ADD's Downloadable Mole Map Guide

ADD's Downloadable Mole Map Guide

Look for:

A: Asymmetry — One half different from the other, or odd shaped

B: Border – Irregular border

C: Color – For example, tan and brown, black, sometimes, red, white or even blue

D: Diameter – Gotten larger than the width of a pencil eraser?

E: Evolved – A change in size, shape or color

Any of these are good reasons to head to your dermatologist. Maybe you’ll get a lollipop.

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