› Forums › General Melanoma Community › Looking for good melanoma center for monitoring and Total Body Photography
- This topic has 18 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 1 month ago by
kelty.
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- August 1, 2012 at 3:44 am
I am a woman in my 60s and was diagnosed about 6 years ago with a Clark's level 11 melanoma on my forearm (Breslow .25mm – no more info.) that my husband insisted I have checked. Had WLE and was told to come back yearly. I really never gave it another thought, and certainly never expected to have another one. A few weeks ago, I was diagnosed with one melanoma in situ on my lower leg, and a severely atypical mole on my upper arm. I had WLE on each.
I am a woman in my 60s and was diagnosed about 6 years ago with a Clark's level 11 melanoma on my forearm (Breslow .25mm – no more info.) that my husband insisted I have checked. Had WLE and was told to come back yearly. I really never gave it another thought, and certainly never expected to have another one. A few weeks ago, I was diagnosed with one melanoma in situ on my lower leg, and a severely atypical mole on my upper arm. I had WLE on each. My current dermatologist said I will need to be vigilant with self-exam, because the mole that turned out to be melanoma in situ did not look at all suspicious to her. She biopsied it because I asked her to. She is very supportive of my finding a good melanoma clinic and also seeing her at 3 month intervals. Most convenient would be Pittsburgh (Hillman?), Philadelphia, Baltimore, or Washington, but I would also consider Chicago or Minneapolis. I am looking for a center in which monitoring for new primaries via total body photography is a focus. It has been hard to find information about this because centers are emphasizing their expertise in detecting and treating metasasized melanomas. I would of course value their expertise in these areas as well, because I hope to have a long-term relationship with the center I choose, and realize I may be in a position to need those services in the future. For now, though, my focus is on catching any new ones at an early stage, and I have no confidence in my ability to do this on my own. I am hoping that one of you may know something about centers in these cities, and give me a place to start at least. I've been impressed with the level of expertise and plain old wisdon on this board. Thanks for your help!
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- August 1, 2012 at 3:59 am
I have no words of wisdom for you regarding melanoma centers, but if you can get some baseline photos, I think you can monitor yourself very effectively. I've had 3 primaries. I caught them all. Two of them wouldn't have looked suspicious except I knew they had changed. For me, change is THE most important factor. My cancer center also believes strongly in mole mapping, however, I don't do traditional mole mapping any more. I just use baseline photos for comparison purposes. If I had a large number of moles, I'd be doing mole mapping. (This is where they take pictures at each visit and compare against the previous visit or earlier visits. Software and doctors can both do comparisons). I'm seen twice a year and that works for me. Just remember, most atypical lesions will NEVER turn into melanoma. Both your primaries were caught very early and it's unlikely you'll have something deeper now – you're on top of the game. (People with multiple primaries actually have better survival stats).
Best wishes,
Janner
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- August 1, 2012 at 3:59 am
I have no words of wisdom for you regarding melanoma centers, but if you can get some baseline photos, I think you can monitor yourself very effectively. I've had 3 primaries. I caught them all. Two of them wouldn't have looked suspicious except I knew they had changed. For me, change is THE most important factor. My cancer center also believes strongly in mole mapping, however, I don't do traditional mole mapping any more. I just use baseline photos for comparison purposes. If I had a large number of moles, I'd be doing mole mapping. (This is where they take pictures at each visit and compare against the previous visit or earlier visits. Software and doctors can both do comparisons). I'm seen twice a year and that works for me. Just remember, most atypical lesions will NEVER turn into melanoma. Both your primaries were caught very early and it's unlikely you'll have something deeper now – you're on top of the game. (People with multiple primaries actually have better survival stats).
Best wishes,
Janner
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- August 1, 2012 at 3:59 am
I have no words of wisdom for you regarding melanoma centers, but if you can get some baseline photos, I think you can monitor yourself very effectively. I've had 3 primaries. I caught them all. Two of them wouldn't have looked suspicious except I knew they had changed. For me, change is THE most important factor. My cancer center also believes strongly in mole mapping, however, I don't do traditional mole mapping any more. I just use baseline photos for comparison purposes. If I had a large number of moles, I'd be doing mole mapping. (This is where they take pictures at each visit and compare against the previous visit or earlier visits. Software and doctors can both do comparisons). I'm seen twice a year and that works for me. Just remember, most atypical lesions will NEVER turn into melanoma. Both your primaries were caught very early and it's unlikely you'll have something deeper now – you're on top of the game. (People with multiple primaries actually have better survival stats).
Best wishes,
Janner
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- August 1, 2012 at 12:46 pm
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- August 1, 2012 at 12:46 pm
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- August 1, 2012 at 12:46 pm
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- August 1, 2012 at 2:26 pm
My husband just started down this road in April. His situation is much different that yours, as he has mucosal melanoma ini the nasal cavity. He is going to the Hillman Cancer Center in Pittsburgh. Dr. Tarhini is a melanoma specialist there. I saw that you are in Warriors Mark. We are in Altoona. The ride to Pittsburgh isn't so bad anymore. The roads are much better.
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- August 1, 2012 at 2:26 pm
My husband just started down this road in April. His situation is much different that yours, as he has mucosal melanoma ini the nasal cavity. He is going to the Hillman Cancer Center in Pittsburgh. Dr. Tarhini is a melanoma specialist there. I saw that you are in Warriors Mark. We are in Altoona. The ride to Pittsburgh isn't so bad anymore. The roads are much better.
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- August 1, 2012 at 2:26 pm
My husband just started down this road in April. His situation is much different that yours, as he has mucosal melanoma ini the nasal cavity. He is going to the Hillman Cancer Center in Pittsburgh. Dr. Tarhini is a melanoma specialist there. I saw that you are in Warriors Mark. We are in Altoona. The ride to Pittsburgh isn't so bad anymore. The roads are much better.
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Tagged: cutaneous melanoma
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