Foot melanoma is the deadliest cancer

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60 Seconds to Stomp Out Cancer-Foot melanoma is the deadliest cancer, but routine foot self exams can increase early detection, survival

PR Newswire

08-07-07

CHICAGO, Aug 07, 2007 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The next time you clip your toenails, take a closer look at the rest of your feet. An extra 60 seconds could save your life.

Foot and ankle surgeons say routine self examinations of the feet are an important way to find skin cancer early, when it's easiest to cure. Half of the people who learn they have melanoma of the foot die within five years because the cancer had already spread throughout their body by the time it was diagnosed.

Nearly 60,000 people will learn they have melanoma this year. It's not known how many of those cases will involve the foot, but more than 8,100 melanoma patients will die... nearly one death every hour. If melanoma is detected in its earliest stages, 92 percent of patients are alive after five years.

Unlike many other types of cancer, melanoma strikes people of all age groups, even the young. Whites are 10 times more likely to develop melanoma than blacks. But studies suggest more than half of melanoma cases in blacks involve the foot, where late diagnosis leads to a higher death rate. Routine foot self exams increase the likelihood of noticing suspicious moles, freckles or other spots.

"The first question I'm going to ask a patient is, .How long has it been there?'" says Neil Campbell, DPM, FACFAS, a spokesman for the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS).

Foot and ankle surgeons recommend focusing on the three most common areas for foot melanoma: the soles, between the toes, and around or under the toenails. Campbell notes melanoma can develop anywhere on the body including areas that receive little sun exposure, such as the feet and ankles. If a mole, freckle or spot starts to change over the course of a month and becomes asymmetrical or changes its border, color, diameter or elevation, see a doctor immediately. Those are the ABCDEs, or signs, of melanoma.

For more information on malignant melanoma of the foot, or to find a local foot and ankle surgeon, visit the ACFAS consumer Web site, Invalid Link Removed.

The American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS) is a professional society of more than 6,000 foot and ankle surgeons. Founded in 1942, the College's mission is to promote research and provide continuing education for the foot and ankle surgical specialty, and to educate the general public on foot health and conditions of the foot and ankle through its consumer website, Invalid Link Removed.

SOURCE American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons

CONTACT: Mark Forstneger of American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, Public Relations

Manager, +1-773-693-9300 x. 1306, [email protected]

URL: Invalid Link Removed
 
Great, another thing that will kill me that I have to add to the list of things I already google and wrongdiagnosis on a daily basis.
 
I thought small cell lung cancer was the deadliest cancer. That or chronic myoloid lukemia.

There's probably lots of different ways to construe "deadliest" cancer. Pancreatic cancer has almost zero treatment options and people don't usually discover they have it until they only have a few weeks/months to live. So that seems deadliest to me.

However, in this case I think they mean because melanoma is so common and spreads so readily to other tissues.

I posted this because when I read the article I realized that I had never actually looked at my foot for moles. I grew-up in the sun and got burned more time than I can remember so I do check out my torso but it just never occurred to me to check my feet. :hammer:
 
I just man up and burn those black spots off with a lit cigar.


Just kidding. I think they mean "deadliest" as in terms of frequency of occurence in relation to how many of those 8100 melanoma deaths had it on their feet first. I'd definitely say that pancreatic cancer is a one way ticket to the other side, but as to how common it is..I don't know.
 
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