Although any diagnosis of cancer is frightening, very few people die of nonmelanoma skin cancers. They are generally slow-growing and very curable. A number of options are available for treating these skin problems, including surgery, cryosurgery, phototherapy, radiation, and topical 5-fluorouracil. Few comparison studies have been performed to see which procedures are most effective for these skin problems.
For any skin cancer and for some keratoses that re...
Read more »...prevention on the message boards. Find more information on skin cancer treatment and skin cancer... Read more »
...statistics, about 8400 people will die of melanoma skin cancer this year. Melanoma is an... Read more »
...medical conditions and their treatments in relation to skin cancer. While most people accept... Read more »
...Reuters, Senator John McCain, who has suffered from skin cancer in the past, had a spot removed... Read more »
...are destroyed, or the growth has developed into a skin cancer with abnormal cells that penetrate... Read more »
(Ivanhoe Newswire) Hope may be on the horizon for people with the most deadly form of skin cancer. University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute... Read summary »
A new treatment designed to "train" the body to fight skin cancer has shown some promise in a recent study. The drug is called a cancer vaccine,... Read summary »
Researchers say that using microscopic gold particles that target melanoma cells and then "boil" them when exposed to certain lighting holds promise... Read summary »
By Kirsten Houmann, Ivanhoe Health Correspondent ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Those who have had non-melanoma skin cancer may be at... Read summary »
Researchers in Pennsylvania say that compounds found in broccoli and cabbage may hold a key for helping to prevent melanoma. In a recent study, the... Read summary »