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Novel analysis quantifies the benefit of melanoma screening


 

FROM CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY, BIOMARKERS, AND PREVENTION

“Our data provide reassuring evidence that screening, alongside education about proper UV protection and the appearance of melanoma, is likely benefiting patients with a significantly elevated risk for melanoma,” Dr. Sargen said in the interview “Further studies are needed to determine whether individuals without a family history of melanoma may benefit from whole-body screening, and whether the benefits vary by ethnicity.”

He acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the relatively small sample size of melanoma cases in the NCI Familial Melanoma Study and the imputation of missing melanoma-thickness data. “Additionally, since this was a prospective cohort study, we were not able to distinguish the independent effect of each intervention,” he said. “Randomized controlled studies are needed to understand the impact of each aspect of the intervention, such as whole-body screening, melanoma education, or strategies for skin protection.”

In an interview, Maryam M. Asgari, MD, professor of dermatology at Harvard University, Boston, called the analysis “well done,” but commented on the potential role of selection bias impacting the findings. “People who have a strong family history of melanoma and who are opting to engage in an NCI study and come in for full-body skin checks and go through that education process may have very different health-seeking behaviors than individuals in the general population that would be reported to SEER,” she said.

She also raised the question of whether the results were driven by the early detection through the NCI’s program of provider screening or through the educational component that enables earlier self-detection. “If you’re an individual involved in a study and that brings attention to your moles and you have a strong family history of melanoma to begin with, it is not surprising that you are going to have heightened awareness of any changing mole and therefore are more likely to have melanoma detected at an earlier stage,” Dr. Asgari said.

The study was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics at the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Sargen reported having no financial disclosures.
Dr. Asgari disclosed that she has received research support from the Melanoma Research Alliance.

dbrunk@mdedge.com

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