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Do we need to rethink the diagnoses melanoma in situ and severely dysplastic naevus?

Authors :
Caitlin R. Semsarian
Tara Ma
Brooke Nickel
Richard A. Scolyer
Peter M. Ferguson
H. Peter Soyer
Lisa Parker
Alexandra Barratt
John F. Thompson
Katy J.L. Bell
Source :
British Journal of Dermatology
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Many countries have seen a dramatic increase in the reported incidence of cutaneous melanoma in recent decades, largely driven by increased diagnoses of melanoma in situ and thin invasive melanoma. The incidence of thick and metastatic melanomas, and melanoma mortality have remained relatively stable. While aging populations could be causing some true increase in melanoma incidence, much of this increase may represent overdiagnosis: diagnosis of lesions that would never have caused harm if left undetected and untreated. If it occurs, melanoma overdiagnosis may result in potential psychological and physical harms to individuals, as well as significant cost to the healthcare system from procedures and long-term surveillance. The use of new diagnostic labels (e.g. “melanocytic neoplasm”) and/or the recalibration of diagnostic thresholds for the diagnosis of melanoma in situ could reduce these harms.

Details

ISSN :
13652133
Volume :
186
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The British journal of dermatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0b9eb5f63eb2e0f95e93a69531a0997