Html code here! Replace this with any non empty raw html code and that's it.

A targeted method improving early melanoma detection

Date:

Share this article:

Del denne artikel:

By focusing on the one mole that does not match the rest, doctors are improving early melanoma detection while avoiding unnecessary biopsies.

In busy clinics, every unnecessary biopsy matters. Each procedure brings anxiety, cost and waiting time, while missing an early melanoma can be life-threatening.

That balance between acting quickly and avoiding overtreatment has pushed dermatologists to rethink how skin cancer is spotted in real life, especially in patients with many moles.

Over the past decade, research shows that a pattern-based approach can significantly improve clinical efficiency.

Studies report fewer false alarms, earlier detection and greater confidence among both specialists and general clinicians. At the centre of this shift is a deceptively simple idea.

Also read: These ingredients can cause blood pressure to spike within minutes, experts say

Why checklists fall short

For years, skin cancer screening relied heavily on the ABCDE checklist, which looks for asymmetry, border irregularity, colour variation, diameter and evolution.

While useful, this method can struggle in patients with dozens of atypical moles, where many lesions technically break the rules but remain harmless.

Researchers have found that checklist medicine can lead to unnecessary biopsies or missed early cancers when changes are subtle.

This is where pattern recognition comes in, a diagnostic skill already used widely in radiology and pathology.

Also read: Chronic pain does not necessarily age the brain, study shows

How pattern recognition works

Dermatologists observed that most benign moles on the same person tend to resemble each other.

Melanomas often do not. The “ugly duckling” concept describes the single lesion that breaks a person’s usual skin pattern.

Studies published in JAMA Dermatology and the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology show that clinicians using this approach correctly identified melanomas at high rates while dramatically reducing biopsies of benign moles.

In some trials, specificity improved enough to cut unnecessary procedures several-fold without lowering safety.

Also read: New research sheds light on the effects of Dry January

What this means in practice

The approach is particularly valuable in high-risk patients and time-pressured clinics.

It allows doctors to focus attention where it matters most, rather than treating every irregular mole the same.

For patients, the message is simpler than memorising rules. Know your own skin and notice what stands out from the rest.

Key principles include:

Also read: Scientists find link between daily steps and reduced Alzheimer’s risk

  • comparing moles to each other, not to diagrams
  • watching for lesions that change faster than others
  • seeking assessment when something looks out of place

Earlier detection saves lives, but smarter detection also spares harm.

Sources: Times of India and JAMA

Also read: Drop weight loss: How you can improve your health in other ways

Other articles

New approach could make cancer vaccines more effective

A subtle redesign of an experimental HPV vaccine significantly boosted the immune system’s ability to attack cancer in early tests.

Eight days without sleep: 27-year-old speaks about the consequences

Sleep is often deprioritized in a busy everyday life. However, too little sleep can have serious consequences.

This makes sourdough different from regular bread

More people are choosing sourdough bread in the belief that it is healthier than regular bread. But what does the research actually say?

Common characteristics of narcissism and psychopathy

A global study suggests that the societies we grow up in may influence how strongly we prioritise ourselves over others later in life.

New approach could make cancer vaccines more effective

A subtle redesign of an experimental HPV vaccine significantly boosted the immune system’s ability to attack cancer in early tests.

Eight days without sleep: 27-year-old speaks about the consequences

Sleep is often deprioritized in a busy everyday life. However, too little sleep can have serious consequences.

This makes sourdough different from regular bread

More people are choosing sourdough bread in the belief that it is healthier than regular bread. But what does the research actually say?