New laser-based tool that detects skin cancer
Scientists have developed a new laser-based tool which they claim could help doctors better diagnose melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer that kills thousands of people every year.
Developed by a team at the Duke University in the US, the tool produces high-resolution images by pumping small amounts of energy into skin cells and help pinpoint rogue cells.
Thomas Matthews, who helped develop the new two-laser microscopy technique at Duke, said the new tool enabled scientists for the first time to identify substantial chemical differences between cancerous and healthy skin tissues.
For the study, appeared in journal Science Translational Medicine, the Duke team imaged 42 skin slices with the new tool and the images showed that melanomas tend to have more eumelanin, a kind of skin pigment, than healthy tissue. Using the amount of eumelanin as a diagnostic criterion, the team used the tool to correctly identify all 11 melanoma samples in the study. The technique will be further tested using thousands of archived skin slices. Studying old samples will verify whether the new technique can identify changes in moles that eventually did become cancerous. Even if the technique proves, on a large scale, to be 50 per cent more accurate than a biopsy, it would prevent about 100,000 false melanoma diagnoses.
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