Wishaw dad's nose had to be removed after skin cancer diagnosis

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Steven Frame with wife Shelley -Credit:Daily Record


A Wishaw dad had to have his nose removed and remodelled after being diagnosed with skin cancer.

Steven Frame, 36, is now warning of the risk of UK rays after sunshine led to a tumour that meant he nearly lost his nose. The dad-of-three and his wife Shelley are looking to highlight how the sun in Scotland can be as dangerous as it is abroad.

Steven, who is dad to Taylor, 13, Tommy, five, and Evie, three, had suffered an earlier burn on his nose after a camping gas cannister exploded in his face. His ears, nose and forehead were badly burned and made his skin more vulnerable to the sun's rays, the Daily Record reports.

Two years later his skin cancer ordeal started and led to his nose having to be removed. Steven had a spot on the right side of his nose which he kept popping but it kept returning.

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Steven sought advice from his GP but was initially told it was simply a cyst.

Shelley said: "They just said it was a cyst or a spot. Then he knocked the scab off it and there was a hole in his nose."

Steven Frame
Steven Frame had to have a nose reconstructed from skin on his forehead. -Credit:Daily Record

Steven added: "I was concerned because it wasn't painful when I popped or squeezed it and when I did pop it, it swelled to about 5cm.

"It kept getting bigger. When the scab came off it was like a volcano. I could see right into the back of my nose."

After insisting something serious was wrong Steven was referred to Monklands Hospital, Airdrie where he was finally diagnosed with skin cancer on his nose. A week later he underwent surgery to have the cancer cut out.

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However, a biopsy revealed the cancer was deeper than originally thought and within a month he had four surgeries taking away all the flesh on his nose.

In order to create a new nose surgeons removed a flap of skin extending from his eyebrow to just under his hairline. Because of where the skin was removed from his forehead, the tip of his nose still grows a "fringe" of head hair.

The NHS promised to remove it with laser treatment but the backlog of cases since Covid means it has not yet happened so Steven has to shave it.

The trauma of his cancer battle has also impacted Steven's mental health and he now continues to have every spot that does quickly disappear checked. He has had several other spots removed as a precaution but all have been benign.

Shelley says she now makes sure Steven always wears sunblock, even in the mild Scottish sunshine. The couple are also urging people to stay in the shade wherever possible and to always use suncream.

Steven after his surgery.
Steven after his surgery. -Credit:Daily Record

Shelley said: "Steven wasn't a sun worshipper but just didn't wear suncream when he was out and about.

"I am always checking he has put it on now."

Steven's case is now being used by doctors to highlight the dangers of skin cancer.

Shelley said: "His cancer didn't look like other skin cancers. The NHS have since used his photos to help diagnose other people.

"We are just lucky he kept picking at his spot or it could have stayed there for a while and spread."

A skin cancer charity has warned that Scots tend to believe they are not at risk of the sun in Scotland and do not wear SPF or protective clothing the way they would if they were abroad.

Chair of Melanoma Action and Support Scotland (MASScot) Leigh Smith said the greater risk to people who had previously suffered burns was now well known and those affected need to take action to protect their skin.

Steven is urging others to protect themselves in the Scottish sun
Steven is urging others to protect themselves in the Scottish sun -Credit:Daily Record

She said: "It is not just burns but scars as well because cell damage makes you more susceptible to skin cancer."

But she said everyone must protect themselves from the Scottish sun.

Recently when she was in a school north of Aberdeen to give a talk on the dangers of the sun she noted that every child in the class except one were sunburnt.

She said: "I asked why they all had sunburn and they said it was their school sports day the previous day. But it hadn't been sunny, it had been cloudy and that's what people don't realise.

"The UV rays can come through the cloud so even if it's cloudy in the summer, between 11 and 3 you should still use sun protection.

"I asked the one boy who wasn't sunburned if he hadn't been at sports day. He said he had been but that his mum had a melanoma on her leg and always makes sure he wore sun cream."

She continued: "Skin cancer can be really, really nasty. Ten years ago you would still die from it. You can still die now but in fewer numbers because of the new drugs.

"But the new drugs are expensive, they could bankrupt the government. That's why a policy of prevention is so important but the Scottish Government don't seem to be listening."