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Skin Cancer Screening Updated Evidence Report and Systematic Review for the US Preventive Services Task Force

Journal

JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
Volume 329, Issue 15, Pages 1296-1307

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2023.3262

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The objective of this article is to review the benefits and harms of screening for skin cancer. The results suggest that earlier detection of skin cancer is associated with decreased mortality risk, but visual skin examination does not significantly reduce melanoma mortality in adolescents or adults, and routine clinician skin examination is not associated with earlier stage at melanoma detection. There is inconsistent evidence on the association between clinician skin examination and thinner melanoma lesions at detection.
IMPORTANCE Skin cancer is the most common cancer type and is a major cause of morbidity.OBJECTIVE To systematically review the benefits and harms of screening for skin cancer to inform the US Preventive Services Task Force.DATA SOURCES MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials from June 1, 2015, through January 7, 2022; surveillance through December 16, 2022. STUDY SELECTION English-language studies conducted in asymptomatic populations 15 years or older.DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS Two reviewers independently appraised the articles and extracted relevant data from fair-or good-quality studies; results were narratively summarized.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Morbidity; mortality; skin cancer stage, precursor lesions, or lesion thickness at detection; harms of screening.RESULTS Twenty studies in 29 articles were included (N = 6 053 411). Direct evidence on screening effectiveness was from 3 nonrandomized analyses of 2 population-based skin cancer screening programs in Germany (n =1791615) and suggested no melanoma mortality benefit at the population level over 4 to 10 years' follow-up. Six studies (n = 2 935 513) provided inconsistent evidence on the association between clinician skin examination and lesion thickness or stage at diagnosis. Compared with usual care, routine clinician skin examination was not associated with increased detection of skin cancer or precursor lesions (5 studies) or stage at melanoma detection (3 studies). Evidence on the association between clinician skin examination and lesion thickness at detection was inconsistent (3 studies). Nine studies (n = 1 326 051) found a consistent positive association between more advanced stage at melanoma detection and increasing risk of melanoma-associated and all-cause mortality. Two studies (n = 232) found little to no persistent cosmetic or psychosocial harms associated with screening.CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE A substantial nonrandomized evidence base suggests a clear association between earlier stage at skin cancer detection and decreased mortality risk. However, nonrandomized studies suggest little to no melanoma mortality benefit associated with skin cancer screening with visual skin examination in adolescents or adults and no association between routine clinician skin examination and earlier stage at melanoma detection. Evidence is inconsistent regarding whether clinician skin examination is associated with thinner melanoma lesions at detection.

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