Scimex: Australian researchers have pinpointed a set of risk factors that
could help doctors tailor individuals’ skin examinations and catch
melanoma at an early stage. The new study published online today by JAMA Dermatology shows the team has identified high risk patients who may benefit from tailored surveillance. The
incidence of melanoma that occurs on the skin is increasing in
predominantly white-skinned populations and Australia’s incidence is
among the highest in the world.
Caroline Watts of the University of Sydney
and coauthors examined clinical features associated with melanomas
according to patient risk factors (many moles, history of previous
melanoma and family history of melanoma) to improve the identification
and treatment of those at higher risk.
The study included 2,727 patients with melanoma from the Melanoma Patterns of Care Study,
of whom 1,052 (39 percent) were defined as higher risk because of
family history, multiple primary melanomas or many moles. The most
common risk factor in this group was having many moles, followed by a
personal history and a family history.
The authors report the
average age at diagnosis was younger for higher-risk patients (62 vs 65
years) compared with those patients at lower risk because they did not
have these risk factors. However, that age differed by risk factor: 56
years for patients with a family history, 59 years for those with many
moles and 69 years for those with a previous melanoma.
Also,
higher-risk patients with many moles were more likely to have melanoma
on the trunk, those with a family history were more likely to have
melanomas on the limbs, and those with a personal history were more
likely to have melanoma on the head and neck.
Dr Watts stated:
“The results of our study suggest that a person’s risk factor status
might be used to tailor their surveillance program in terms of starting
age and education about skin self-examination or more intensive
surveillance. For instance, doctors could encourage people with many
moles or with a family history of melanoma to start skin
self-examination and monitoring at an earlier age than other people, and
discuss the body sites that require particular attention.”
Limitations
of the study include risk factors based on physician recall and patient
medical records. The authors also did not assess the reliability or
validity of the risk factor data.