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Prevalence and correlates of skin examination among ethnically diverse young adult survivors of childhood cancer

Authors :
Kimberly A. Miller
Angela A. Li
Katherine Y. Wojcik
Julia Stal
Myles G. Cockburn
Gino K. In
David R. Freyer
Ann S. Hamilton
Joel E. Milam
Source :
Cancer Medicine. 12:8557-8566
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Skin cancer is the most common secondary malignancy among young adult childhood cancer survivors (YA-CCS). Skin examination to detect skin cancer early (including melanoma as well as basal or squamous cell skin cancers), both physician-based (PSE) and self-skin exam (SSE), is recommended, particularly for radiotherapy-exposed YA-CCS who are at high risk of developing skin cancer.Awareness and prevalence of skin examination and demographic, clinical, and healthcare correlates were examined in a population-based sample of YA-CCS with diverse cancer types excluding melanoma. Descriptive frequencies and logistic regression models were conducted using sample weights to correct for non-response bias with PSE, SSE and adherence to both as outcomes.The sample comprised 1064 participants with 53% Latino. Eight percent of participants were aware of the need for skin examination; 9% reported receipt of PSE within past 2 years; 35% reported regular SSE; and 6% were adherent to both. Among the radiotherapy-treated, 10% were aware of the need for skin examination, 10% reported recent PSE; 38% reported regular SSE; and 8% were adherent to both. Healthcare and clinical factors including healthcare self-efficacy, engagement in cancer-related follow-up care, greater treatment intensity and greater number of treatment-related late effects were positively associated with PSE and SSE. Latino YA-CCS were less likely to engage in PSE and SSE.Adherence to recommended screening for skin cancer was low in this at-risk population, notably for YA-CCS exposed to radiotherapy. The development of effective strategies to expand skin cancer screening is needed in this at-risk population.

Details

ISSN :
20457634
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....29dde9301cfbbd0584c2781138b2fab0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5520