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New weapon in war on skin cancer



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Published Date: 03 August 2008
A SCANNER which can detect the early stages of skin cancer has been made available to patients in Scotland for the first time – at £100 a time.
The device allows doctors to screen and evaluate a mole within seconds and either reassure patients that it is harmless or refer them on for specialist treatment.

At present, diagnosis is usually made by GPs, who rely on their judgment and experie
nce to decide whether or not they think a mole is potentially dangerous and should be looked at by a dermatologist.

But manufacturers say the hand-held MoleMate device instantly analyses changes in the main components of skin and so can help give an early diagnosis.

Although skin cancer is the only form of the disease which is growing in Scotland, the scans are not available on the NHS. The only service is being provided by a private clinic which charges £100 for screening and evaluation.

Melanoma is the most dangerous form of skin cancer, with cases doubling in the UK over the last 20 years. Skin cancer is now the most common cancer in the UK and in Scotland. Around 7,000 new cases of skin cancer are diagnosed every year.

One in six Scots are believed to be genetically predisposed to skin cancer, and the disease claims 150 lives every year. The most common reason for skin cancer, which claimed the life of Celtic legend Tommy Burns at 51 earlier this year, is exposure to sunlight.

A spokeswoman for Medicalternative, the Edinburgh private clinic offering the scans, said: "MoleMate is a non-invasive, rapid and painless mole screening device that enables a medical practitioner to quickly scan your moles, showing information up to 2mm under the skin. This can assist them in making an instant decision on the health of the mole."

Dr Lindsey Myskow, a part-time NHS GP who runs the screening clinics, said: "We scan the mole for a number of features to see whether it is suspicious or not. The scanner measures these pretty accurately and helps with diagnosis.

"If the patient is worried about a number of moles, we would scan them all. In the main they are benign, but there are some we have to refer on to a specialist.

"This is an added dimension that helps with clinical assessment. If we look at the mole and it is completely fine then we can give that reassurance."

The manufacturer is Cambridge-based Astron Clinica, founded by scientist Symon Cotton in 1998. It says doctors use a "clinically proven scoring system" developed with GP practices and Cambridge University Teaching Hospital to decide whether to refer patients to have a mole removed.

Myskow said: "There is a scale that we work to from 0-12. Anything around six is suspicious."

The scanner technology was developed a decade ago, but the first portable hand-held version was introduced to the medical market at a cost of £3,400 last year. As well as Medicalternative, around 70 other clinics have introduced them in the rest of the UK.

The device uses light wave technology to penetrate 2mm beneath the surface of the skin. Differences in the light waves that return can be used to detect potentially harmful changes in colour, blood flow, the skin pigment melanin and collagen that may signal progression to cancer unless treated. Without the scanner, GPs can only rely on a visual diagnosis.

Carolyn Dawson decided to undergo screening because she has always had a large number of moles on her skin.

"I have always been careful to have them checked out and they have been fine and not suspicious," said the 36-year-old nurse from Edinburgh.

"There are a couple on my leg and neck that I like to keep an eye on.

"The procedure was quick and easy and very reassuring. Nothing was found and it gave me the peace of mind I am looking for.

"They are used a lot in Australia, which has a big problem with skin cancer, and I expect screening like this will become much more popular over here."

Dermatology experts said the device could prove a useful diagnostic aid for GPs. But Dr Michael Edward, head of the dermatology department at Glasgow University, said: "In my experience nothing beats the human eye.

"An experienced GP will be able to give a diagnosis straight away and if in any doubt at all will refer on to a dermatologist."

In the 10 years between 1996 and 2005, skin cancer increased by 43% among men and by 20% in women.

Grieving parents' warning to young people

"IT STARTS with a wee brown mole and ends up in a coffin," says David Clarke from Lenzie. "Young people have to be aware that skin cancer is not a disease of old people."

In January this year, David's 29-year-old son Alan, an IT manager for a steel fabrication company, died from a malignant melanoma. He would have been 30 this week, but instead of celebrating this milestone in their son's life, his parents and sister Lesley are still struggling to come to terms with his death.

His friends were also devastated that someone their age could die. "Teenagers, those in their early twenties, if they see anything on their skin that is different or changing, must see a doctor, seek help. There is no time to delay, as in the worst-case scenario, like Alan, it can be very fast," David says.

Today, Alan's parents will travel to the Gussie Park training ground of Dundee United – the team their son supported since he was a youngster – for the inaugural Alan Clarke Memorial Under-15 competition, funded with money he left.

"Tragedy can build into something positive – the importance for youngsters to be aware of their bodies and if they see anything, tell someone and get it checked," says David.

David and Irene Clarke are raising money for The Beatson Institute for Cancer Research, Glasgow, on http://www.justgiving.com/ireneclarke2.





The full article contains 1008 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 August 2008 7:26 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Cancer research
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 03/08/2008 00:42:20

Considering the News we were all told the other day that,..
'Sun Screen Creams' are a 'Ripp Off' and don't Work anyway!,

This device will be welcome News for some that, worship the Sun.
2

Evia,

03/08/2008 01:37:03
Charles, very many women don't seem to believe what they are being told and lie baking in the sun, believing a tanned, leathery skin makes the look beautiful. When I worked, I saw them coming back from holiday, looking 10/20 years older. They either don't care, or put to much reliance on sunscreens. In both cases, they need to wise-up and start covering up more but I expect most of them are too vain and have a great need to show off their bodies.
3

doublescotch,

U.S.A 03/08/2008 01:37:46
#1 Charles you are right. I have had two basil-cell cancers frozen off. Yesterday I had one removed by surgery. I have seven stiches in my hand. When we were growing up it was olive-oil and iodine to get a tan. No-one said then if you had fair-skin to stay out of the sun more's the pity. We should have been like those southern belles:) They hid from the Sun.
4

Evia,

03/08/2008 02:02:17
doublescotch, I wish they had had the education in my day that they have now because skin cancer can develop years later I believe. I never did try to get a tan, pale but interesting is the way to go. Some people would have acted on the advice, if it had been there for us, but there is always the "won't happen to me" brigade.

I wish you all the best and hope you don't get any more cancers.
5

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 03/08/2008 02:21:27

Ladies Evia and ds,

I did try to get the sun tan at certain stages in my life, but never worshiped it, however when with a church I used to be with, a group of us went to a remote part of Spain, and I got some burns.
10years later I have this unexplained skin condition on my neck, I went to my GP but not much help, so I know I should push further to get it checked out, but I don't.

Luckily DYW, 'Suzanne', is very sensible and in the 11years I have lived with her, never once has she gone out her way to get a "Tan", in-fact she wont let herself go out in the sun unless she has loads of sunscreen on.

Its Sad that mainly Girls think a "Tan" is sexy, because I for one, Don't!

A touch of "Tan" is nice, that shows of the parts that aren't "tanned", but too much is just a,..

'Turn Off'.
6

Evia,

03/08/2008 02:27:11
Charles, you obviously have a sensible DYW. There are other ways to get a tan but I even worry about the contents of the tan in a bottle stuff because the ingredients themselves could be carcinogens. I'd have to look up each ingredient before I would use them.
7

doublescotch,

U.S.A 03/08/2008 03:03:32
#4 and 5. When I was growing up, if it was sunny,we went to Portabella for the day. There was no sun-tan lotians then. Our skin was so fair, we could be as Billy Connelly so aptly put it, "Pale-Blue and Scottish". I remember when we got home my mother rubbing Pond's cream on our skin to cool us down. My mother always said I would burn even on an over-cast day. now we are paying for those wonderful days. Do you remember the Mystery tours? They always ended up in Portabella:)
8

doublescotch,

U.S.A 03/08/2008 03:08:06
#5 Charles,Love.Go and get an another opinion. I am serious. Your skin-condition could be nothing but exzema or then again.... Think of those babies to be. They will want there father to be around to teach them all the wonders of the universe.
DOW
9

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 03/08/2008 03:47:20

ds ~8,

Yes I will take you advice, in-fact my post was incorrect, in a sense, as it was in 1994, I think I got badly Burnt on that excursion to Spain, so that would be 14years ago.

Its one of these things, you think will get better, only to flair-up again, and with being Soo slow and after seeking initial advice, one puts up with it.

But 'YES' our hopeful Babies-to-be, mean the World to me, and I want to be there for them always, at least until they have become secure adults, that know they will always have been loved.

Suzanne also, ...

Problem being, I suppose, I should value myself more, Problem being, I dont.

10

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 03/08/2008 03:57:21

Someone needs their 'hubby' now, to 'cuddle-up' with, so I better go,...

Cu ya later ds,

Thankyou again for thinking about us,

Chas x.
11

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 03/08/2008 04:06:03

And Thakyou Evia for your replies, and thoughts in your comments,

Lve Chas x.
12

Boy Wonder,

03/08/2008 06:19:48
Chuckles, you probably have "skin tags" on your neck. Nothing to worry about, It's extremely common with people as they age. You can get them frozen off like they do with warts. Go see your doc!
13

,

03/08/2008 11:21:38
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
14

Kate,

Zurich 03/08/2008 16:52:27
Hi, Charles and BW, and good afternoon all you others.

Charles, do get that checked out. My brother died of cancer (not skin cancer but cancer is cancer is a killer) and it took a week to get a proper diagnosis.

I do sunbathe, but use the highest sun protection factors I can get hold of and I don't stay out for very long.

The information we are getting is very contradictory: on the one hand we are all suffering from Vitamin D deficiency, as we use too much sun screen and don't let our skins soak up about 15-20 minutes pre-cream every day. On the other hand, skin cancer is the worst killer and is so easy to detect.

This new scanner needs to be on the NHS as soon as possible as not everyone can afford 100 pounds, however worthwhile...
15

Evia,

03/08/2008 20:51:55
#14 Kate

The scanner should be available on the NHS because it would no doubt pay for itself in terms of catching cancers early and avoiding long, costly treatments.

I like to wear very loose long-sleeved tops, long, floaty skirts or trousers, wide-brimmed hat and wrap around sun glasses. This saves me a lot of money on sunscreens but that is not my reason for wearing such gear. Loose, floaty, cover-up clothing is much cooler to wear. I do have to use sunscreens for feet, hands and face and stick with total sunblock.
16

It's me!,

04/08/2008 00:24:47
What puzzles me is why skin cancer doesn't seem to have caused much of a problem to the tens of thousands of national servicemen and women who spent their time in the middle and far east. They were abroad in the baking sun for much longer than a two week holiday in Spain.

 

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