Patient Care
Personalized Care for Personalized Concerns

skin cancer genetic counseling

 

Take our online questionnaire to find out if genetic counseling is appropriate for you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Skin Cancer

Skin cancer is often divided into two categories: non-melanoma and melanoma. Non-melanoma skin cancers are the most common cancers in men and women. There are two types of non-melanoma skin cancer: basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma.

Symptoms

  • An open sore that persists for several weeks
  • A reddish, raised patch or irritated area that may crust or itch, but rarely hurts
  • A wart-like growth
  • A new, irregularly shaped, dark brownish spot with darker or black areas
  • A simple mole that changes in color (particularly turning darker), size (growing), or texture (becoming firmer), and/or flakes or bleeds

Causes/Risk Factors

  • Exposure to sunlight/UV radiation
  • Fair skin
  • History of sunburns or fragile skin
  • Family history of skin cancer
  • Genetic mutations (see below)

Genetic Test

The following genetic tests may be appropriate based on your personal and/or family history:

  • p16, CDK4 (Hereditary melanoma)
  • PTCH (Gorlin syndrome [NBCCS])
  • Genetic variants for skin cancer

Schedule an Appointment

To speak with a board-certified genetic counselor about your risks for this disease:

Learn more about scheduling.

Learn More

American Cancer Society

Skin cancer foundation

 

About Us

Patients

Providers

Who we are...

Informed Medical Decisions, Inc. is the only nationwide network of independent genetic counselors. Using state-of-the-art telephone and internet technology, we bring genetic counseling to patients and providers anywhere.