Posts Tagged ‘MoleSafe’

MoleSafe’s Melanoma Screening Is Newsworthy

Monday, July 12th, 2010

We are very excited by the excellent overview Dr. Max Gomez and WCBS-TV in New York provided on the latest in skin cancer screenings, and in particular the MoleSafe method. If you’re not an early bird or not in the metro area and missed the segment on the morning news this week, here’s a link so you can view it again. You can also read a transcript of the news story for more details.

Maddie-CBStv

While getting your picture taken in a hospital gown is not most people's idea of a flattering photo shoot, especially when it includes unusual poses, but it could be a life saver.

If you’ve been reading this blog, you may also have recognized our own Maddie Pallamary, RN, from the MoleSafe Millburn location, who conducted the patient examination. I’m very proud of the calming, professional and informative style that Maddie clearly exhibits, as do all of our staff clinicians and physicians around the country, and which is so reassuring to new patients.

It is truly exciting to have such an esteemed institution as NYU Langone Medical Center as MoleSafe’s first U.S. hospital partner. But whether it is there in New York City, or Albuquerque, Savannah…or any of our now 6 locations, please consider getting this potentially lifesaving screening for you and your loved ones.

We truly hope future news coverage about Melanoma will be about its decline vs our ongoing battle to raise awareness and skin cancer prevention.

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MoleSafe's Melanoma Screening Is Newsworthy

Monday, July 12th, 2010

We are very excited by the excellent overview Dr. Max Gomez and WCBS-TV in New York provided on the latest in skin cancer screenings, and in particular the MoleSafe method.  If you’re not an early bird or not in the metro area and missed the segment on the morning news this week, here’s a link so you can view it again.  You can also read a transcript of the news story for more details.

Maddie-CBStv

While getting your picture taken in a hospital gown is not most people's idea of a flattering photo shoot, especially when it includes unusual poses, but it could be a life saver.

If you’ve been reading this blog, you may also have recognized our own Maddie Pallamary, RN, from the MoleSafe Millburn location, who conducted the patient examination.  I’m very proud of the calming, professional and informative style that Maddie clearly exhibits, as do all of our staff clinicians and physicians around the country, and which is so reassuring to new patients.

It is truly exciting to have such an esteemed institution as NYU Langone Medical Center as MoleSafe’s first U.S. hospital partner. But whether it is there in New York City, or Albuquerque, Savannah…or any of our now 6 locations, please consider getting this potentially lifesaving screening for you and your loved ones.

We truly hope future news coverage about Melanoma will be about its decline vs our ongoing battle to raise awareness and skin cancer prevention.

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The View Offers a Better Outlook for Melanoma Screenings

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

The NYU Post-Graduate Medical School and the highly esteemed Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology, which is the first U.S. hospital to have embraced the MoleSafe method, hosted Advances in Dermatology last month for dermatologists and dermatologic surgeons and residents. The goal of the 2-day symposium was to feature findings and lectures with an “unbiased and provocative perspective.” For that reason, I’m particularly proud that the MoleSafe protocol and our revolutionary “View Software” was included in a morning dedicated to information on melanoma and advances in early detection.

The Right View

“View” lets physicians examine images WHILE the patient is in the office for an exam, which enables not only a more thorough exam by the doctor, but more information back to patients in real-time. [Read more in my post from November, when View was unveiled at the International Dermoscopy Society Conference.]

Previously, even with a dermatoscope, doctors reviewed only a few moles and could never be fully confident that their naked eye scrutiny discerned some of the finer, or questionable moles. For dermatologists who refer patients to MoleSafe for a comprehensive and state-of-the-art screening, this software is available for use in their offices at no charge. We just feel it is imperative to bring the opportunity for the best options for melanoma detection to as many patients as possible…and View enables a more clear, super enlarged view of all moles for doctor review, with the ability to pause on any questionable areas and compare the patient’s actual skin along side the macro images that have been delivered to the screen.

Based on the feedback we’ve gotten, this looks to be revolutionizing doctor/patient relationships and the very process of screening for earlier detection of melanomas, especially among high risk patients.

We encourage all of our readers to review the MoleSafe web site FAQs, and to take advantage of the increasing ways and places to get the most efficacious skin cancer examination… and help us make early, accurate detection a team effort among patients, their doctors, and technology.

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More exciting news from MoleSafe

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

UPDATE: New Yorkers, set your DVR and Don’t Miss MoleSafe with Dr. Max Gomez

This Thursday (new date), 7/8, at 5:45A and 6:45A hours, please look for my interview with Dr. Max Gomez on WCBS-TV (channel 2), when we’ll discuss advances in melanoma detection and our new clinic at NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER, the first Hospital in the United States to offer MoleSafe’s cutting-edge Melanoma detection service.

New Jersey MoleSafe associate appointed Chairman of Governor’s Cancer Prevention Task Force

As noted in the Asbury Park Press, our own Dr. Jarrod Kaufman, a surgeon on staff at CentraState Medical Center in Freehold Township which recently added the MoleSafe program to their screening services, has been appointed New Jersey chairman of the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer (CoC) Cancer Liaison Program. He is also the chairman of the melanoma work group of the New Jersey Governor’s Task Force on Cancer Prevention, Early Detection and Treatment. We are proud such an esteemed physician is a proponent of our screening services.

Oh – and one more note: MoleSafe is proud to welcome not only CentraState Medical Center to our family of MoleSafe screening locations, but now Nancy N. and J. C. Lewis Cancer & Research Pavilion at St. Joseph’s/Candler in Savannah, GA as well. Check out all of our locations and get an appointment to get checked out today.

Tanning and Taxes

Cancer prevention is a timely topic with the big summer holiday upon us. But it’s not just sun-protection while having outdoor fun that is getting press. CBS Evening News was one of many covering the new 10% sales tax that kicked in today on tanning salons. See the full story here at the 13:35 mark.

Have a fun and sun-smart holiday weekend!

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To Top it Off…

Monday, June 21st, 2010

It was heartening to see a steady stream of people purchasing hats at one of the street fairs in New York City this weekend. I hope it was an enjoyable Father’s Day weekend for you, and that perhaps many of you bought dad a life-preserving HAT for sun protection in lieu of a tie?

To Top it Off: Sun Safety

To Top it Off: Sun Safety

FYI, at these fairs it’s easy to negotiate for a discount if you buy more than one, so consider a hat for yourself, too!

Another good thing to do for yourself and a loved one is to have regular skin cancer screenings.

What topped off my weekend though was also the opportunity to share this story about digital dermoscopy and MoleSafe’s thorough melanoma screenings, thanks to recent press on AssociatedContent.com.  Please share this info with all your friends and relatives as we enter into the season of “fun in the sun.”

Just don’t forget your hat.

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What’s in a name? If it’s “ipi,” a lot!

Friday, June 11th, 2010

What’s in a name? If it’s ipilimumab – or "ipi” for short – it may be the first name associated with prolonged life expectancy for melanoma victims. This new immune stimulator has been making headlines recently for its early success in increasing stage four melanoma survival rates for up to four months. While that might not sounds like a lot, it’s considered highly significant. Dr. Steven O’Day of the Angeles Clinic and Research Institute in Santa Monica, Calif., a lead investigator in the recent melanoma trial explains,

This important because this is a disease where the average survival in these patients is six to nine months, so to increase on average the survival by an additional four months is a very large difference.

And though as Dr. Charles M. Balch, a melanoma expert at Johns Hopkins, said the results of the recent clinical trials are "a single, not a home run,” he added that for this disease, which impacts almost 70,000 Americans a year and growing, "even a single was important”. As further described in The New York Times coverage of ipi,

In a study of patients who had advanced melanoma, those who got an experimental drug lived a median of about 10 months, compared with 6.4 months for those in a control group. After two years, about 23 percent of those who got the drug were alive, compared with 14 percent in the control group.

Lung cancer and melanoma are among the hardest cancers to treat. So the studies are being viewed as significant advances, though far from cures.

Dr. O’Day, who presented the research at this month’s ASCO conference, said no prior large randomized trial in melanoma has been able to demonstrate an improved survival in this type of cancer at all. ascocover

He calls ipilimumab "the light at the end of a long, dark tunnel.”

"These results are exciting because patients with melanoma have few treatment options,” Dr. O’Day said. "After 30 years of failed studies, we finally have an option that shows a significant increase in overall survival, an endpoint that many oncology studies strive for. This new class of inhibitors that overcome T-cell suppression offers hope to melanoma patients and oncologists alike.”

The NY Times article provides a good explanation of how T-cell suppression works to possibly slow tumor growth rate though without yet being able to "put the brakes on”:

Ipilimumab is a more general immune booster. It blocks a protein called CTLA-4 that acts as a brake on T cells, the soldiers of the immune system. It is already also being tested against lung and prostate cancer.

Still, if a tumor does not elicit a strong immune response to begin with, then just keeping the response going longer would not help much, just as lifting one’s foot from the brake usually will not make a car go faster if the accelerator is not pressed.

We at MoleSafe are heartened by this news. As always, we encourage regular and thorough screenings to provide the best line of first defense in preventing melanoma from reaching crisis status. Please contact us at any of our now 6 clinical screening locations.

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What's in a name? If it's "ipi," a lot!

Friday, June 11th, 2010

What’s in a name?  If it’s ipilimumab – or “ipi” for short – it may be the first name associated with prolonged life expectancy for melanoma victims.  This new immune stimulator has been making headlines recently for its early success in increasing stage four melanoma survival rates for up to four months. While that might not sounds like a lot, it’s considered highly significant. Dr. Steven O’Day of the Angeles Clinic and Research Institute in Santa Monica, Calif., a lead investigator in the recent melanoma trial explains,

This important because this is a disease where the average survival in these patients is six to nine months, so to increase on average the survival by an additional four months is a very large difference.

And though as Dr. Charles M. Balch, a melanoma expert at Johns Hopkins, said the results of the recent clinical trials are “a single, not a home run,” he added that for this disease, which impacts almost 70,000 Americans a year and growing, “even a single was important”.  As further described in The New York Times coverage of ipi,

In a study of patients who had advanced melanoma, those who got an experimental drug lived a median of about 10 months, compared with 6.4 months for those in a control group. After two years, about 23 percent of those who got the drug were alive, compared with 14 percent in the control group.

Lung cancer and melanoma are among the hardest cancers to treat. So the studies are being viewed as significant advances, though far from cures.

Dr. O’Day, who presented the research at this month’s ASCO conference, said no prior large randomized trial in melanoma has been able to demonstrate an improved survival in this type of cancer at all.  ascocover

He calls ipilimumab “the light at the end of a long, dark tunnel.”

“These results are exciting because patients with melanoma have few treatment options,” Dr. O’Day said. “After 30 years of failed studies, we finally have an option that shows a significant increase in overall survival, an endpoint that many oncology studies strive for. This new class of inhibitors that overcome T-cell suppression offers hope to melanoma patients and oncologists alike.”

The NY Times article provides a good explanation of how T-cell suppression works to possibly slow tumor growth rate though without yet being able to “put the brakes on”:

Ipilimumab is a more general immune booster. It blocks a protein called CTLA-4 that acts as a brake on T cells, the soldiers of the immune system. It is already also being tested against lung and prostate cancer.

Still, if a tumor does not elicit a strong immune response to begin with, then just keeping the response going longer would not help much, just as lifting one’s foot from the brake usually will not make a car go faster if the accelerator is not pressed.

We at MoleSafe are heartened by this news.  As always, we encourage regular and thorough screenings to provide the best line of first defense in preventing melanoma from reaching crisis status.  Please contact us at any of our now 6 clinical screening locations.

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Discussing advances in Detecting Melanoma – On Fox News

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

I was recently invited to discuss advances in Melanoma detection on the Fox Strategy Room. I hope you’ll take a look at this video and learn about the strides we’re making at MoleSafe.

Dr. Richard Bezozo on Fox Strategy Room 5/28/10

Dr. Richard Bezozo on Fox Strategy Room 5/28/10

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Melanoma Awareness Month!

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

May is Melanoma Awareness Month. So, we thought it was a good time to offer the following reminders about this disease that kills one American every hour.  The first is to remember that if detected early, melanoma can often be successfully treated.

What are the best ways to stay on top of it? Well, of course awareness is the first step. Understanding the serious nature of this form of skin cancer will drive more people to practice better sun safety, and get regular skin exams. 2010 is also the 25th-year anniversary of the development of the "ABCDEs” – the acronym for the quick and simple criteria to use for skin self-exams to help detect skin cancers, including melanoma. Please share these easy reminders with your friends and loved ones:

A is for Asymmetry where one-half of the mole is unlike the other.

ADD's Downloadable Mole Map Guide

B is for Border where the mole is irregular, scalloped or poorly defined.

C is for Color that varies from one area to another or has different shades of tan, brown, black and sometimes white, red or blue.
D is for Diameter of a mole when it is bigger than the size of a pencil eraser.
E is for Evolving or changing in size, shape or color.

The ABDCEs were created by dermatologists at NYU Langone Medical Center, which is home to the most recent addition of the MoleSafe clinic locations. This exemplary institution is also conducting its annual free skin cancer screening on Thursday, May 6, 2010 from 1:30 PM to 5:00 PM at 550 First Avenue in the Charles C. Harris Skin and Cancer Pavilion on the first floor of the Medical Center. No appointment is necessary for the free screening and everyone is encouraged to take advantage of this annual opportunity – especially those who have a changing mole, a history of melanoma, or who are over the age of 50 and do not have a regular dermatologist.

Also, the Skin Cancer Foundation is back on the road, conducting free screenings around the country. For a list of a locations please visit their web site.

As always, we encourage you to invest in your healthy future with the "gold standard” of skin cancer screenings at any of our four (soon to be SIX!) MoleSafe locations in the country. Our final reminder? Melanoma Awareness shouldn’t be limited to the month of May. Stay vigilant. Stay aware.

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The Good Results are In

Friday, April 16th, 2010

The British Journal of Dermatology recently released a paper1 and editorial column2 demonstrating the effectiveness of the MoleMap program ("MoleSafe” here in the US originated in New Zealand and Australia as "MoleMap”) compared to a face to face dermatology visit.

Note: This blog post may be a little more formal and "scholarly” than my usual posts. I thought it was important to convey this compelling information accurately and as objectively as possible, so I’ll be including longer sections of quotes from the BJD paper.

The study, hoped to determine if patients could be screened for melanomas and other skin cancers effectively with the use of a teledermatology system (which includes the use of epiluminescence microscopy and macrophotograhy and forwards results to dermatologists) as triage (screening and prioritization) by general practitioners and lesion diagnosis clinics when using proper screening equipment, compared to face-to-face examinations by dermatology specialists.

Conducted in New Zealand, this was particularly valuable to that location since NZ suffers from one of the "highest reported incidence of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancers in the world” 1 while at the same time being challenged by an undersupply of dermatologists. In addition, some 15% of the population there lives more than an hour’s drive from a dermatologist. It’s not just essential to confirm the value of teledermatology in that country, but also in all places where "the technology could be used as a triage tool to reduce waiting lists and thus improve access to the public hospital lesion diagnosis clinic.”

As a matter of fact, this was reported in the British Journal of Dermatology because of the interest in determining if this would be a good solution in Great Britain where current U.K. National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines dictate that all suspected skin malignancy should be seen face to face, and the use of teledermatology for pigmented lesions remains controversial.

"However, the incorporation of high-quality teledermoscopic images in addition to macroscopic images may challenge this view.”2

Indeed, the researchers comment in their conclusion that:

Teledermoscopy offers considerable potential to reduce patient travel costs and waiting time, and thus to increase access to specialist care. …We hope to integrate this technology into the public health service as it is already in use in NZ and Australia within the private sector (MoleMap programme).1

We read the results of this clinical study with great interest, and some pride, since our sister [parent?] company, MoleMap New Zealand, was selected to supply the quality equipment and trained technicians. That is significant is because lesser quality methods and equipment used in earlier studies to compare diagnoses done via face-to-face exams vs preliminary screenings with teledermoscopy led to lesser consensus:

The use of a melanographer skilled in digital and dermoscopic imaging melanographerensured consistently high image quality. Earlier trials have been hampered by inconsistent digital images and often required the general practitioner to obtain the image. Image quality depends on training, experience and time, which may not be practical for a busy general practitioner.1

This also supported of the value of including Dermoscopy, which is an essential component of any MoleSafe exam, over just macro-photography, as used by some physicians:

"Concordance of teledermoscopy to face-to-face diagnosis in this study was much higher than that reported in earlier trials. This in part reflected the greater specificity that Dermoscopy has over simple macro photography in the triage of lesions.”1

How It Was Conducted:

First, the study set out to "assess the accuracy and reproducibility of teledermatology including dermoscopic images (teledermoscopy) compared with face-to-face assessments by dermatologists.” Some two hundred patients with a total of 491 lesions were seen by a dermatologist, and also screened with same methods used by the MoleMap/MoleSafe program with the results sent to the doctors for review.

All patients were seen face to face by two out of three dermatologists, and after a period of 4 weeks the same lesions were reviewed anonymously by two using a standardized history, macro digital images and corresponding dermoscopic images.2

The results were that there was excellent agreement between teledermoscopy and face-to-face diagnosis.

We have shown that 136 of 200 patients (constituting 74% of lesions) could have been spared a face-to-face consultation through using teledermoscopy as the preliminary assessment.1

The agreement in assessment of more significant lesions was an even better 83% for both face-to-face and teledermoscopy. But what was particularly interesting is that the type of scanning and review done by MoleSafe — including histological examination of suspected malignant lesions — showed the teledermoscopic diagnosis to be more accurate than face-to-face diagnosis.

"This seemingly unlikely observation may relate to the ability to enlarge and contemplate images on a computer screen which is simply not possible during examination of the patient with a hand-held dermatoscope.”2

It’s also important to note that reproducing the study’s results are contingent on the training and experience of the dermatologist, both of whom in the trial were experienced in tele-dermatology and dermoscopy. And when done in conjunction with a whole-body exam, again, as we do at MoleSafe, and as done in a naked eye exam by your dermatologist, results should be even more significant:

"…this store-and-forward form of teledermoscopy provided only images of the lesions of concern and did not permit a whole-body examination. The use of a whole-body teledermoscopy service may overcome this limitation, and a recent analysis of 100 consecutive melanomas diagnosed by MoleMap NZ showed that 37% of patients were unaware of their melanoma.”1

Here’s the takeaway…

In the future, general practitioners may be able to refer a patient with suspicious skin lesions to a ‘virtual lesion clinic’ for triage. Perhaps there will soon be mobile clinics since "the technology is portable, easy to operate and images can be transmitted via a virtual private network to the teledermoscopists – overcoming geographical barriers and delivering service to remote areas.”

What does this study add?

• Teledermoscopy approximated 100% sensitivity and 90% specificity for detecting melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancers.

• Importantly, 74% of all lesions were determined to be manageable by the general practitioner without needing to be seen face-to-face by a dermatologist.

• This use of teledermoscopy as a triage tool offers the potential to shorten waiting lists and thus improve healthcare access and delivery.1

Simply put, this is a clarion call for the value and effectiveness of the kinds of screenings that are conducted by MoleSafe and MoleMap and we are proud to be at the leading edge of skin cancer detection and awareness.

1Source: British Journal of Dermatology, 12/09: "Successful triage of patients referred to a skin lesion clinic using teledermoscopy (IMAGE IT trial)” by E. Tan, A. Yung, M. Jameson,* A. Oakley and M. Rademaker  Journal Compilation ©2010 British Association of Dermatologists • British Journal of Dermatology 2010 162, pp803–811

2Commentary: British Journal of Dermatology – "Does teledermoscopy validate teledermatology for triage of skin lesions?” S. M. Halper 2010

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