Newswise, October 6, 2015--According to the American Cancer Society, more than 70,000 people are
diagnosed with melanoma each year in the United States. It is recommended that
such individuals perform a thorough skin self-exam on a regular basis to look
for potential disease recurrence or new melanomas. But research by Rutgers
Cancer Institute of New Jersey investigators shows fewer than 15 percent of
melanoma patients surveyed regularly examine all parts of their body. Rutgers
Cancer Institute behavioral scientist Elliot J. Coups, PhD, an associate
professor of medicine at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, is the
lead author of the work just published in the journal Melanoma Research He shares more about the research.
Q: How was the study structured?
A: The study included a sample of 176
individuals diagnosed with stage 0 to stage III cutaneous malignant melanoma.
Participants completed either a written or phone survey regarding their skin
self-examination behaviors and associated factors. Participants were mostly
Caucasian (99 percent) and female (51 percent) with an average age of 62 years.
Q: What did you and your colleagues
find?
A: While nearly three-quarters (72
percent) of participants reported doing a skin self-exam in the past two
months, only 14 percent had looked at all parts of their body. In terms of how
they conducted the self-exams, few said they always used a full-length mirror
(13 percent) or a hand-held mirror (11 percent). And only 9 percent said they
always had someone help them to do the exam.
Q: What accounts for this?
A: The most common reasons given for not
having conducted such an exam over the prior two month period were that
patients didn’t think of it, didn’t know what to look for, or didn’t know that
they should. Other responses included they were never told by their doctor to
do it and that they receive a regular exam from a doctor. Our research shows
that a higher level of education (more than half in the study were college
graduates) and a greater knowledge of the ABCDE rule for detecting melanoma
(looking at the asymmetry, border irregularity, color, diameter and evolution
of the mole or affected area of the skin) were significantly associated with
conducting a more thorough skin self-exam. Being shown what suspicious moles
look like, how to do a proper skin self-exam, and patients’ level of confidence
in knowing what to look for also were associated with more thorough self-exams.
Q: Why is this research important?
A: Prior studies on this subject have
shown between 14 and 39 percent of patients with a melanoma history perform a
thorough skin self-exam on a regular basis. But there has been limited
information regarding their knowledge and confidence on how to perform the exam
and how they are actually doing it. As shown in our study, nearly 75 percent of
patients are taking the time to do a self-exam, but very few patients perform a
thorough exam or use tools (like mirrors or the help of another person) to
search for and track potentially suspicious moles. Our study supports the need
for the development of interventions for this population so that they can
increase their knowledge and skills for performing regular, thorough skin
self-exams that can help to identify recurrent or new melanomas.
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