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Image: iStock.
The earlier you find a cancerous mole, the easier the treatment and the better the outcomes. But it’s not easy distinguishing between harmless, benign moles and those that warrant further attention.
In recent decades, the incidence of skin cancer has increased in Australia. Two in three Australians will be diagnosed with skin cancer by the time they are 70 years old.
Non-melanoma skin cancers, including basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, are the most common skin cancers but are less dangerous than melanoma.
In 2010, melanoma was the fourth most commonly diagnosed cancer in Australia, with 11,405 new cases diagnosed. It is also the most common cancer diagnosed in Australians aged 15 to 39 years.
A number of characteristics are associated with an increased risk of melanoma, including:
- age
- number of moles
- skin type and colour (especially if you always burn and never tan in the sun)
- personal history of melanoma or other skin cancer
- freckles
- unusual-looking moles, larger than five millimetres
- red or light hair.
High levels of sun exposure and history of sunburn also increase the risk of melanoma.
Look closely. This is what the sun is really doing to your skin.
Advances in treatment over the past three decades have improved the chances of survival. The five-year survival rate has increased from 85.8% to 90.7%. The prognosis is better the earlier melanoma is diagnosed.
Using this rule, people without any professional health care experience were able to correctly identify 93% of melanoma images.
By regularly checking your own skin, you may notice moles that are changing as well as identify new moles. A study of more than 3,500 Queenslanders with melanoma found that almost half of the melanomas were detected by patients themselves and a fifth were found by partners.