Skin cancer
According to the World Health Organisation both non-melanoma and melanoma skin cancers have been increasing over the past decades; we are now facing an epidemic of these conditions. How did we get to this stage? Various initiatives including the ABCDE of melanoma have been developed by prestigious institutions to improve awareness and diagnosis but there is still no improvement in the prevalence of melanoma. Why is prevention apparently not effective and how hopeful does the future look? In this section we are aiming to provide a skin cancer focus in our daily bibliography coverage.
RT @PoschChristian: #aging is a disease – no question – and probably the greatest risk factor for developing #melanoma or any other #skin #…
The role of integrins in melanoma: a review onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.111…
#dermatology #skincancer #dermatologia…
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1237818669301936129
Here are February 2020 influencers for #dermatology #dermatologia #skincancer and #dermtwitter conversations. Pleas…
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1234595633534840839
Approximately 4 out of five patients w/ advanced #melanoma who discontinued treatment after achieving complete resp…
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1231694804217729024
RT @ducrest: Great editorial by @linos_eleni @DrSherryPagoto for behavioral counseling for #skincancer. Behavior changes is key for primary…
Here are January 2020 influencers for #dermatology #dermatologia #skincancer & #dermtwitter. Please keep on sharing…
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1223371861586857985
RT @MelanomaReAlli: #ICYMI This Simple Test Predicts Which #Melanoma #Patients Are At Risk Of #Cancer Recurrence buff.ly/2TPCVDL
RT @CureMelanoma: This year, over 196,000 people are expected to be diagnosed with #melanoma in the United States. Check the latest stats o…
RT @CureMelanoma: Did you know? In ages 15-29, #melanoma is the second most commonly diagnosed cancer.