The relationship between skin cancers, solar radiation and ozone depletion
Open Access
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 65 (6) , 916-921
- https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1992.192
Abstract
During the period 1957-1984 the annual age-adjusted incidence rate of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) increased by 350% for men and 440% for women in Norway. The annual exposure to carcinogenic sunlight in Norway, calculated by use of measured ozone levels, showed no increasing trend during the same period. Thus, ozone depletion is not a cause of the increasing trend of the incidence rates of skin cancers. The incidence rates of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) increase with decreasing latitude in Norway. The same is true for CMM in Norway, Sweden, and Finland. Our data were used to estimate the implications of a future ozone depletion for the incidence rates of skin cancer: a 10% ozone depletion was found to give rise to a 16-18% increase in the incidence rate of SCC (men and women), a 19% increase in the incidence rate of CMM for men and a 32% increase in the incidence rate of CMM for women. The difference between the numbers for men and women is almost significant and may be related to a different intermittent exposure pattern to sunlight of the two sexes. The increasing trend in the incidence rates of CMM is strongest for the trunk and lower extremities of women, followed by that for the trunk of men. The increasing incidence rates of skin cancers as well as the changing pattern of incidence on different parts of the body is most likely due to changing habits of sun exposure. Comparisons of relative densities of CMM, SCC, LMM and SCC falling per unit area of skin at different parts of the body indicate that sun exposure is the main cause of these cancer forms although other unknown factors may play significant roles as well. For the population as a whole sun exposure during vacations to sunny countries has so far been of minor importance in skin cancer induction.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- ANNUAL EXPOSURES TO CARCINOGENIC RADIATION FROM THE SUN AT DIFFERENT LATITUDES and AMPLIFICATION FACTORS RELATED TO OZONE DEPLETION. THE USE OF DIFFERENT GEOMETRICAL REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SKIN SURFACE RECEIVING THE ULTRAVIOLET RADIATIONPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1990
- INCREASING INCIDENCE OF CUTANEOUS MELANOMA, ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION AND THE CLINICIANPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1989
- BIOLOGICAL AMPLIFICATION FACTOR FOR SUNLIGHT-INDUCED NONMELANOMA SKIN-CANCER AT HIGH-LATITUDES1989
- OZONE DEPLETION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES FOR THE FLUENCE OF CARCINOGENIC SUNLIGHT1989
- Melanoma of the skin is not caused by ultraviolet radiation but by a chemical xenobioticMedical Hypotheses, 1987
- The Anatomical Distribution of Skin CancersInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1986
- Geographical distribution of cutaneous melanoma in QueenslandThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1983
- INCIDENCE AND REPORTING OF CUTANEOUS MELANOMA IN QUEENSLANDAustralasian Journal of Dermatology, 1982
- Ultraviolet radiation and melanoma mortality in the United StatesEnvironmental Research, 1980
- Relationship of Melanoma and other Skin Cancer Mortality to Latitude and Ultraviolet Radiation in the United States and CanadaInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1974