Feature

Counsel fair-skinned patients on cancer prevention, says task force


 

FROM USPSTF

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has recommended that clinicians counsel fair-skinned young adults, adolescents, children, and parents of young children about minimizing exposure to ultraviolet radiation to reduce their risk of skin cancer, in a draft recommendation statement that is available online.

Woman applying sunscreen Wavebreakmedia/Thinkstock
The task force also drafted a grade C recommendation (providing a small net benefit) for skin cancer behavioral counseling for adults older than 24 years but found insufficient evidence (grade I) to comment on the value of counseling adults about performing skin exams on themselves. “Existing evidence indicates that the net benefit of counseling all adults older than age 24 years is small. In determining whether this service is appropriate in individual cases, patients and clinicians should consider the presence of risk factors for skin cancer,” according to the summary of the draft recommendation.

The draft recommendation is open for public comment until 8:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on Nov. 6, 2017.

The draft recommendation can be viewed and comments can be submitted online at the USPSTF site.

Recommended Reading

Immune-suppressing drugs in IBD linked to higher skin cancer rates
MDedge Family Medicine
Model: Quadrivalent vaccine could cost effectively cut MSM’s HPV-related cancers
MDedge Family Medicine
Racial differences in skin cancer risk after organ transplantation
MDedge Family Medicine
Tattoo artist survey finds almost half agree to tattoo skin with lesions
MDedge Family Medicine
Chronic GVHD linked to fivefold increase in squamous cell skin carcinomas
MDedge Family Medicine
Study links photosensitizing antihypertensives to SCC
MDedge Family Medicine
Skin cancer risk similar for liver and kidney transplant recipients
MDedge Family Medicine
Skin cancer procedures up by 35% since 2012
MDedge Family Medicine
How patients want their biopsy results
MDedge Family Medicine
Subsequent squamous cell carcinoma risk higher in HIV patients with low CD4 count
MDedge Family Medicine