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Madre Farbot
01-04-2004, 09:09 AM
Scots find DIY cure for skin cancer

A breakthrough treatment which will allow thousands of skin cancer sufferers to treat themselves at home has been discovered by Scots researchers.

As the number of cases of the most common cancer in the UK continues to soar in Scotland, experts at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee have hailed the new development as a cheap and user-friendly way to help patients increase their chances of recovery.

They have discovered a new way of combining chemicals and light to destroy skin tumours, which will dramatically cut the number of hospital visits patients have to make.

The treatment is based on Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), in which malignant growths are impregnated with light-sensitive drugs before they are activated by a powerful light source, causing a chemical reaction which destroys the tumour cells.

The results of the research are still to be published and consultant dermatologist Professor James Ferguson said he did not want to give too much away about the development.

But he added: "We know PDT works but we wanted to make it better. We looked at using more light sources to make a more convenient and more effective low-cost form that can be used at home."

Ferguson’s team has developed a prototype of the device and hopes it will be available within 18 months.

The team at Ninewells is based at the hospital’s Scottish Photodynamic Therapy Centre, which opened three years ago. Since then it has carried out more than 1,600 treatments. Skin cancer is the major focus of the work there, with more than 1,400 procedures carried out on 400 patients.

The centre is entirely funded by the Dumfermline-based Barbara Stewart Cancer Trust.

PDT can also be used internally on the gullet, lungs, bladder, bile duct, brain and eyes, usually through an endoscope or intravenous methods. But skin cancer treatment is the most advanced area of the treatment as tumours are easy to get at.

"We basically find that by putting a cream on an area of affected skin for three to four hours and then exposing it to a light source, we can get complete cures to selective tumours and tumours which have not yet become malignant," Ferguson said.

PDT achieves an overall clearance rate of 93%, with recurrence rates of up to only 10% over a 12-month period.

A side-effect of the treatment sees some patients remaining photosensitive for weeks afterwards, which means the skin is sensitive to daylight.

A home-based treatment is part of an aim to make treatment more ‘patient-friendly’.

Ferguson said: "The attraction is that for selected types of cancer it is a relatively non-invasive procedure."

"There is calculated evidence suggesting that 100 people a year die from cancers associated with sunbed use."

Ferguson said enjoying the sun was about moderation and taking precautions.

"The messages in prevention is for people to enjoy themselves but not to resort to undue risks," he added.
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For the full article...
http://www.scotlandonsunday.com/index.cfm?id=9092004

Hmmm... looks interesting. Fighting light with light.

who45
01-04-2004, 09:28 AM
This sounds more like a treatment, but not a cure. There is no cure for any kind of cancer as of yet. Don't get me wrong though, this seems like good news.

grinner
01-04-2004, 09:53 AM
I should tell my father about this. Too many years when he was younger riding a tractor on the farm... has lead to skin cancer on his forehead and face and arms. Which is why I try to stay away from direct sunlight whenever possible.

BlackThorn
01-04-2004, 09:57 AM
The sun is your enemy. I've never been into the whole baked look . . . on men or women. Pale is good. Look at Chiana!

If you absolutely can't stand being pale, go for a good bottled tan. They even have the nice air brushed ones now for those who can afford it.

who45
01-04-2004, 09:59 AM
I agree. I don't like to lay out in the sun and I don't do the tanning bed thing. I use a good self tanner that comes with those little wipes. Works really good.

grinner
01-04-2004, 10:02 AM
I actually don't particularly care for the whole tanned look. Makes people look like alligators or something.

plus I hate sunburn on my head... it frelling hurts.

atlantagirl
01-04-2004, 10:33 AM
Scapers: We don't tan, but we don't burn. :D

BrowderChick
01-04-2004, 01:40 PM
My father has skin cancer and he has a form of cancer of the lungs.....He has been doing really well over the years. Nothing major but it's still enough to scare you....

who45
01-04-2004, 01:48 PM
Originally posted by BrowderChick
My father has skin cancer and he has a form of cancer of the lungs.....He has been doing really well over the years. Nothing major but it's still enough to scare you....

Glad he is doing well.

Darth Buddha
01-05-2004, 12:54 PM
Damn, BrowderChik, that's heavy. Sincerest best wishes for your dad.

And grinner, my old man has had several spots removed (plus I sun poisoned after a couple years as a lifegaurd - despite SPF 21), so I am VERY much with you on staying out of the sun.

Have you ever noticed that a woman who sun worships has the leather look (skin) by about age 40?

scrape_medic
01-05-2004, 01:02 PM
It's a big problem in the UK. It's [usually] so frelling overcast over here that when the sun does come out everyone goes mad trying to get a tan in a day. They burn and damage their skin, then go around proudly showing off their white bits. Madness. I've always tried not to get burnt but still have had a couple of moles removed one of which was a bit dodgy. I now use high factor creams when I am planning to be out in the sun for more than a few hours even if I am only going to work in London and, I go round spraying my workmates with it as well.

grinner
01-05-2004, 02:05 PM
Originally posted by Darth Buddha


Have you ever noticed that a woman who sun worships has the leather look (skin) by about age 40? that is part of the reason that I think that pale skin on a white woman is incredibly sexy. It shows that she is taking care of her skin...

generic_screenname
01-05-2004, 02:13 PM
Originally posted by grinner
I actually don't particularly care for the whole tanned look. Makes people look like alligators or something.


I NEVER understood tanning. It just seems pointless and silly and best and foolishly dangerous at worst.

BrowderChick
01-05-2004, 03:11 PM
Originally posted by Darth Buddha
Damn, BrowderChik, that's heavy. Sincerest best wishes for your dad.

And grinner, my old man has had several spots removed (plus I sun poisoned after a couple years as a lifegaurd - despite SPF 21), so I am VERY much with you on staying out of the sun.

Have you ever noticed that a woman who sun worships has the leather look (skin) by about age 40?

Thank you....He is doing really well with it. I can't really spell it but it is like a minor form of mesothelioma. He was on the rail road for 40 years and I believe he got it from aspestos. Also I will put the skin cancer from the same source. It looks like he has liver spots and when one "changes" he has it removed. He used to be a heavy smoker for years until he was diagnosed. That was when I was about 18. The only real problems he has is that he gets winded alot and he has had heart problems over the years because of it.

I personally tend to avoid tanning as I can see what the sun does. I see people that are in the sun all the time and I know someone who lives in a tanning booth. They look like they are alot older than they really are. I have the pale English skin and I intend to keep it that way. I love being outside and I always carry a bottle of Waterbabies with me. Works great. Haven't had a sunburn in so many years. I do tend to tan a little in the summer but it looks like I have a medium toned skin. My mom wasn;t a sun worshiper but she has a more medium toned skin than I do. She looks great for her age as she takes care of her skin..

Mrelia
01-05-2004, 08:33 PM
I've got olive skin, so I need to have just a teensy bit of a tan so people don't ask my if I'm sick (sometimes I'm downright yellow). But I usually just slap on some SPF30 & a hat and go work in the garden for an hour or so once a week.

BrowderChick
01-05-2004, 08:40 PM
If I did that I would fry.....:) I need something stronger than that...