Counseling should include advice on sunscreen use, protective
clothing, hats and sunglasses to protect against harmful ultraviolet
(UV) rays and also encourage people to avoid sun exposure during the
brightest part of the day as well as indoor tanning, according to
recommendations issued today by the U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force (USPSTF).
The new guidelines from the government-backed, independent panel of
primary care and preventive health experts also apply to some
fair-skinned adults 25 and older who have an increased risk of skin
cancer, but they don’t apply to people with darker skin.
“We found evidence demonstrating that counseling increases the
likelihood that people will reduce their exposure to the sun, which
has been proven to reduce the risk of skin cancer,” said Task Force
member Dr. John Epling, Jr. of Virginia Tech Carilion School of
Medicine and Research Institute in Roanoke.
“The overall benefit was greatest in children, teens and young
adults who have a fair skin type because UV exposure during
childhood and adolescence increases the risk of skin cancer later in
life,” Epling said by email.
People with fair skin types may have ivory or pale skin, light hair
and eye color, or sunburn easily.
Some evidence suggests that counseling may get people to take sun
safety more seriously during childhood and early adulthood, but it’s
less clear whether it helps to counsel older people, the Task Force
writes in JAMA.
Establishing sun safety early in life is important because sunburns
are more dangerous in children and teens, and skin damage early in
life increases the risk of skin cancer later on, and because bad
habits are hard to break, said Dr. Eleni Linos of the University of
California San Francisco, coauthor of an editorial in JAMA Internal
Medicine.
“Changing our behaviors, routines and habits is not easy, even if we
know these changes could theoretically make us healthier,” Linos
said by email.
It’s possible that counseling may encourage more people to perform
skin self-exams to help detect any malignancies when they may be
smaller and easier to treat, but it’s not clear whether this helps
identify skin cancer or whether self-exams make a difference for
people who get routine skin cancer screening from a doctor, the Task
Force writes.
The trouble with asking all adults to do self-exams is that people
may miss abnormalities that need treatment and they may be more
likely than doctors to discover something that appears troubling but
is actually harmless, said Dr. June Robinson, coauthor of an
accompanying editorial in JAMA and a researcher at the Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
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“It may make some people unduly anxious and result in needless skin
biopsies,” Robinson said by email.
A better approach is to explain skin exams to people at high risk
for melanoma, an aggressive and more lethal form of skin cancer,
Robinson said.
“People who need to be trained are melanoma survivors and their
family members, and people who had many sunburns,” Robinson said.
“Skin self- exam does not replace physician examination but it does
help the person to determine when to seek the care of a doctor.”
To be most effective, counseling should also focus on any issues of
cost or convenience that might stop people from using sunscreen or
taking other precautions in the sun, said David Buller, director of
research at Klein Buendel in Golden, Colorado, and coauthor of an
accompanying editorial in JAMA Dermatology.
“For sunscreen, specifically, the cost and feel of sunscreen may
cause people to apply too little to obtain its full protection
benefit, and many people do not reapply it,” Buller said by email.
“Also, people often use sunscreen to extend time outdoors and end up
getting substantial doses of UV even if they avoid a sunburn.”
Shaping ideal sun safety habits may work best while kids are still
too young to start thinking they need a tan to look good or that
sunscreen is unnecessary, said Dr. Laura Ferris of the University of
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, author of an editorial in
JAMA Oncology.
“We establish health habits in childhood, and making use of
sunscreen and general UV protection a habit early in life is likely
to impact the degree of UV protection practiced later in life,”
Ferris said by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2pryCym and http://bit.ly/2GM4KEq JAMA,
http://bit.ly/2IGLby4 JAMA Internal Medicine, http://bit.ly/2prEc3T
JAMA Dermatology, http://bit.ly/2FPdHQe JAMA Oncology, online March
20, 2018.
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