The Spot Check

Dermsquared

Introducing The Spot Check, the latest addition to the lineup of esteemed dermatology podcasts from Dermsquared™. In this exciting new venture for physician assistants and nurse practitioners, periodic timely episodes spotlight key special events, upcoming conferences, professional opportunities, and more. If you’re a PA or NP, The Spot Check is your go-to resource for staying informed, connected, and inspired. Tune in to stay ahead of the curve and make the most of important happenings in dermatology.

  1. Melanoma Today: Prevention, Prognosis, and Precision Testing

    4D AGO

    Melanoma Today: Prevention, Prognosis, and Precision Testing

    In this episode of The Spot Check, Jamie Restivo, PA-C, is joined by Andrew Baker, MBA, PA-C, for a timely, practice-focused discussion on where melanoma care stands in 2026. From prevention strategies that change patient behavior to advances in risk stratification and precision testing, they break down what’s working, what remains challenging, and how emerging tools are reshaping clinical decision-making. They begin with prevention, still the highest-leverage intervention but one that remains difficult to translate into daily behavior. Baker emphasizes simple, concrete messaging—sunburns, especially blistering ones, carry real weight over time, and indoor tanning before age 35 significantly increases risk. The challenge is making risks feel immediate enough to matter. From there, they discuss adherence. Sunscreen works, but only if patients use it. Anchoring use to existing routines, prioritizing cosmetic elegance, and connecting UV exposure to visible changes like photoaging are what actually move the needle. “Behavior change isn’t just about education alone,” Baker says. “It’s really about designing habits that are easy to repeat.” They then step back to review the broader epidemiology. Melanoma incidence continues to rise, driven in part by better detection and more frequent screening, but also by cumulative UV exposure and an aging population. At the same time, mortality has not declined proportionally, largely because more aggressive subtypes don’t follow predictable patterns and are harder to catch early. When it comes to diagnosis, the fundamentals still hold. Breslow depth, ulceration, and mitotic rate remain central to staging and prognosis.  Layered onto that is a growing role for gene expression profiling (GEP). Tests like DecisionDx and Merlin add another level of biologic insight, helping refine decisions around surveillance, referral, and procedures like sentinel lymph node biopsy. The throughline is integration. Melanoma care today is about combining prevention, clinical examination, pathology, and tumor biology to more precisely define patient risk and guide management. The views expressed in this episode are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of Dermsquared. This program is intended for health care professionals and is provided for educational purposes only.   Clinicians are responsible for applying independent clinical judgment in patient care.

    25 min
  2. Scalp Health, Innovation & Building a Brand Beyond the Bedside

    APR 17

    Scalp Health, Innovation & Building a Brand Beyond the Bedside

    In this episode of The Spot Check, Jamie Restivo, PA-C, sits down with Erica Ramos, DMSc, PA-C, to unpack a familiar clinical frustration: scalp disease that should respond, but often doesn’t.   Ramos traces the gap back to adherence. Patients stretch time between washes, rinse too quickly, or avoid medicated shampoos altogether, whether to preserve color, manage texture, or simply keep up with daily life. “Nobody’s leaving it on long enough,” she says. “That’s why I encourage people to use it as a mask.”   Their conversation then moves beyond ingredients and into behavior. They explore how cultural hair practices, mobility limitations, and cosmetic priorities shape treatment success—often more than the prescription itself. The issue, as Restivo frames it, isn’t a lack of options. It’s asking patients to adopt routines they’re unlikely to follow.  Ramos’s response was to build something that fits into that reality, like a leave-on, dry formulation designed to extend contact time without disrupting hair care practices. She walks through the thinking behind the formulation—anchored by salicylic acid as a keratolytic and supported by ingredients selected for anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial effects—and why delivery matters just as much as mechanism.  The conversation broadens into a more practical philosophy of care to meet patients where they are, layer therapies when needed, and think in terms of tools rather than single solutions. Or, as Ramos puts it, “We can lead a horse to water, but we can’t make them drink.”   It’s a grounded and nuanced look at what happens when we stop blaming the treatment and start redesigning how it’s used.  The views expressed in this episode are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of Dermsquared. This program is intended for health care professionals and is provided for educational purposes only.    Clinicians are responsible for applying independent clinical judgment in patient care.

    32 min
  3. Actinic Keratosis: Treat Early, Treat Gently, Treat the Field 

    MAR 20

    Actinic Keratosis: Treat Early, Treat Gently, Treat the Field 

    Managing actinic keratoses (AKs) well requires more than freezing what we see. In this episode of The Spot Check, Jamie Restivo, PA-C, is joined by dermatology nurse practitioner David Seiter, NP, for a grounded, practical conversation on treating AKs with a broader, more preventive lens.  At the center of the discussion is field therapy. While cryotherapy remains useful for isolated lesions, Seiter emphasizes the importance of addressing the underlying field of UV-damaged keratinocytes, much of it invisible. Starting earlier, when photodamage is still mild, can make treatment more tolerable and more sustainable for patients over time.  From there, the conversation moves into the realities of clinical practice: how to choose between commonly used topicals, how to counsel patients through expected reactions, and how small decisions, including cost, access, and even how instructions are framed, can shape whether a patient is willing to repeat treatment. The goal is not maximal reaction, but a manageable one.  Prevention threads throughout, from sunscreen counseling to adjunctive options like Polypodium leucotomos and nicotinamide, always with an emphasis on meeting patients where they are.  The takeaway is a familiar one, but easy to overlook: treating AKs is not just about clearing lesions. It is about recognizing the field early and helping patients stay with a plan they can return to over time.    The views expressed in this episode are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of Dermsquared. This program is intended for health care professionals and is provided for educational purposes only.    Clinicians are responsible for applying independent clinical judgment in patient care.

    33 min
  4. When BCC Gets Complicated: Real-World Cases & Medical Therapy

    FEB 20

    When BCC Gets Complicated: Real-World Cases & Medical Therapy

    In this episode of The Spot Check, Jamie Restivo, PA-C, sits down with Aaron Farberg, MD, dermatologist and Mohs surgeon, to unpack what locally advanced basal cell carcinoma (BCC) really looks like in practice. As Dr Farberg notes, it is not always just about size. It is about location, recurrence, tumor biology, surgical morbidity, and sometimes, a patient who has simply had enough surgery.  Through two real-world cases, the conversation explores how hedgehog pathway inhibitors can be used strategically to reduce tumor burden, including in neoadjuvant settings, and how alternative dosing and proactive management of adverse effects (including early L-carnitine use for muscle cramps) may improve tolerability.  In one case, a large scalp tumor was medically reduced before surgery. In another, systemic therapy helped decrease the number of tumors in a patient with numerous BCCs, allowing for more selective surgical intervention.  The throughline is clinical judgment. When surgery alone may lead to significant morbidity, systemic therapy can create space for tumor shrinkage, shared decision-making, and more thoughtful sequencing of care.  Disclaimer: This episode of The Spot Check  is supported by an industry sponsor. Topic areas and guest participation may be informed by sponsor interest. The sponsor may have had the opportunity to review the content for medical accuracy; however, the clinical discussion and opinions expressed are those of the host and guests.   This program is intended for health care professionals and is provided for educational purposes only. It should not be interpreted as medical advice. Clinicians are responsible for reviewing prescribing information and applying independent clinical judgment within their scope of practice.

    34 min
  5. From Counter to Clinic: Making Sense of Cosmeceuticals  

    JAN 16

    From Counter to Clinic: Making Sense of Cosmeceuticals  

    In this wide-ranging and deeply practical episode of The Spot Check, host Jamie Restivo, MPAS, PA-C, welcomes Cheri Frey, MD, board-certified dermatologist, residency program director at Howard University, and internationally recognized expert in evidence-based skincare, for a conversation on how cosmeceuticals and over-the-counter products meaningfully support medical dermatology.   Dr Frey begins by reframing the modern cosmeceutical landscape, emphasizing the increasing scientific rigor behind formulation development—from longevity medicine and cellular senescence to peptides and the expanding role of exosomes. She underscores that many OTC products now reflect years of clinical testing, and that dermatology clinicians are increasingly involved earlier in product conception and validation.   The discussion then turns to photoprotection, with a particular focus on visible light and hyperpigmentation, especially in skin of color. Drawing on work from Dr Henry Lim’s group, Dr Frey explains how visible light, especially high-energy blue light, stimulates melanogenesis through Opsin 3 activation, stabilizes tyrosinase, and contributes to long-lasting dyspigmentation even with standard sunscreen use. Both speakers emphasize the foundational role of tinted sunscreens containing iron oxides, which block visible light while providing cosmetic camouflage, and discuss practical considerations such as shade matching, seasonal skin tone changes, and adherence.   From there, the conversation expands into adjunctive skincare across common inflammatory conditions, including acne, rosacea, atopic dermatitis, and melasma. Dr Frey reviews the emerging role of microbiome-targeted acne therapies, such as bacteriophage-based products that selectively reduce pathogenic C. acnes without disrupting beneficial phylotypes. She also highlights barrier-supportive cleansers and moisturizers, emphasizing patient experience, tolerability, and cost accessibility as key drivers of adherence.   The episode closes with a thoughtful examination of novel pigment-targeting and barrier-repair strategies, including thiamidol as a human tyrosinase inhibitor for melasma and lentigines, DNA repair enzyme sunscreens for high-risk patients with actinic damage, and sodium hypochlorite washes as a modern, approachable alternative to traditional bleach baths in atopic dermatitis and other inflammatory conditions.   Dr Frey’s central message is clear; patients are already using OTC skincare, and when clinicians guide those choices intentionally, cosmeceuticals can meaningfully enhance outcomes, tolerability, and long-term disease control.

    38 min
  6. Old Dog, New Tricks: Rethinking Phototherapy for Psoriasis and Beyond

    11/21/2025

    Old Dog, New Tricks: Rethinking Phototherapy for Psoriasis and Beyond

    In this clinically deep and surprisingly modern discussion, host Jamie Restivo, MPAS, PA-C sits down with Lawrence Green, MD, board-certified dermatologist, clinical professor at George Washington University, and Chair of the National Psoriasis Foundation Research Committee, to reexamine a decades-old therapy through a fresh lens: narrowband UVB phototherapy.   Dr Green traces phototherapy’s evolution from the cumbersome Goeckerman tar regimens of the 1990s to today’s safe, targeted narrowband UVB devices (310–312 nm), which drastically limit carcinogenic wavelengths and offer a more precise inflammatory response. “Phototherapy of the 1990s is not the phototherapy we use today,” he emphasizes, calling it a niche therapy that remains the best choice for very specific patient groups.   Together, Restivo and Green outline where light treatment truly shines: guttate psoriasis, pregnancy, pediatric cases, episodic flares, extensive vitiligo, severe pruritus, and moderate plaque disease that is too widespread for topicals but not appropriate for biologics. Narrowband UVB, Green stresses, is “local therapy that leads to a systemic immune response,” allowing treatment without placing medication into the body.   The conversation then shifts to at-home phototherapy, a modality Dr Green once avoided due to safety concerns, user error, and poor adherence. That changed with modern guided systems that mimic in-office decision-making through dose-adjusted protocols, Fitzpatrick-based starting points, and real-time compliance reporting back to the prescriber. Green highlights findings from the landmark LITE study, led by Joel Gelfand, MD, which showed home treatment to be non-inferior to office-based phototherapy, equally safe, and three times more likely to be completed, across diverse skin types.   He concludes with a pragmatic reminder: clinicians no longer need light boxes in their offices to prescribe phototherapy. “Phototherapy is for everyone,” Green says. “It’s an older therapy that’s now a new therapy because of the technology… We’ve taught an old dog new tricks.”

    33 min
  7. Let There Be Light: Integrating PDT into Clinical Practice for Actinic Keratoses

    11/07/2025

    Let There Be Light: Integrating PDT into Clinical Practice for Actinic Keratoses

    In this episode of The Spot Check, host Jamie Restivo, MPAS, PA-C, welcomes Fabrizio Galimberti, MD, PhD, dermatologist and Medical Director at Conway Medical Center, for an engaging discussion on one of the most common yet deceptively complex conditions seen in clinical practice, actinic keratoses (AKs).  Dr Galimberti emphasizes the importance of distinguishing AKs from “dry skin,” reminding listeners that these are pre-cancerous lesions with the potential to progress to squamous cell carcinoma, which is responsible for more deaths annually than melanoma. Together, he and Restivo unpack the art and science of combining cryotherapy and field therapy, with data showing a reduced burden of both pre-cancerous and cancerous lesions when these treatments are paired. “This is a chronic condition,” Dr Galimberti notes. “We need to treat for now and for the future.”  The conversation explores how photodynamic therapy (PDT) fits into the AK treatment paradigm, offering controlled, in-office precision with cosmetic benefits and no risk of scarring. Dr Galimberti outlines his evolving patient-selection criteria, insights on optimizing incubation times, and the growing promise of painless PDT. He also shares pragmatic workflow pearls, like scheduling PDT and follow-up appointments simultaneously, to improve adherence and outcomes.  Listeners will gain a grounded, practice-ready framework for treating AKs holistically: balancing efficacy, tolerability, and patient experience while addressing both visible and subclinical disease.

    31 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Introducing The Spot Check, the latest addition to the lineup of esteemed dermatology podcasts from Dermsquared™. In this exciting new venture for physician assistants and nurse practitioners, periodic timely episodes spotlight key special events, upcoming conferences, professional opportunities, and more. If you’re a PA or NP, The Spot Check is your go-to resource for staying informed, connected, and inspired. Tune in to stay ahead of the curve and make the most of important happenings in dermatology.

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