Melanoma: linked temporal and latitude changes in the United States
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cancer Causes & Control
- Vol. 4 (5) , 413-418
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00050859
Abstract
The rise in the incidence and mortality from melanoma of the skin is slowing down in younger age groups in the United States. In many White populations, including that of the US, melanoma incidence and mortality rates increase according to proximity of residence to the Equator. Variations with age in this gradient do not seem to have been examined. We examined how the influence of latitude on melanoma rates varied with age. Estimates of age-specific trends by time and by latitude for natural logarithm (Ln) melanoma incidence-rates from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) programs, and Ln melanoma mortality rates from the US Vital Statistics were derived from fitted regression equations. Unexpectedly, a decline from old age to youth in the influence of latitude was found for both incidence and mortality from melanoma of the skin in males, and for mortality in females. Further, these changes in the relationship to latitude with age correlated with the changes in time trends with age. The link with exposure suggests that the time trends in melanoma are driven by variations in damage to melanocytes in early life that increases sensitivity to sunlight. This has implications for the general understanding of melanoma etiology and for health education.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cutaneous melanoma at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: comparison with rates in two San Francisco Bay Area countiesCancer Causes & Control, 1992
- Malignant melanoma risk by nativity, place of residence at diagnosis, and age at migrationCancer Causes & Control, 1991
- Indications of future decreasing trends in skin‐melanoma mortality among whites in the United StatesInternational Journal of Cancer, 1991
- Systematic underreporting of cutaneous malignant melanoma in Massachusetts: Possible implications for national incidence figuresJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1991
- Temporal change in diagnostic criteria as a cause of the increase of malignant melanoma over time is unlikelyInternational Journal of Cancer, 1991
- The nordic profile of skin cancer incidence. A comparative epidemiological study of the three main types of skin cancerInternational Journal of Cancer, 1991
- Mortality and fatality of cutaneous malignant melanoma in Sweden, 1982–1986Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy, 1990
- MOLES IN AUSTRALIAN AND BRITISH SCHOOLCHILDRENPublished by Elsevier ,1988
- An analysis of trends in mortality from malignant melanoma of the skin in AustraliaInternational Journal of Cancer, 1980
- Incidence of malignant melanoma of the skin in England and Wales and its relationship to sunshine.BMJ, 1979