Risk of Cutaneous Carcinoma in Patients Treated with Oral Methoxsalen Photochemotherapy for Psoriasis
- 12 April 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 300 (15) , 809-813
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197904123001501
Abstract
A 2.1-year prospective study of 1373 patients given oral 8-methoxypsoralen photochemotherapy for psoriasis revealed 30 patients with a total of 48 basal-cell and squamous-cell carcinomas. The observed incidence of cutaneous carcinoma was 2.63 (95 per cent confidence limits = 1.91 to 3.90) times that expected for an age, sex and geographically matched population. Relative risk to patients with history of ionizing radiation was 3.68 (99 per cent confidence limits, 2.42 to 8.69). Patients with a previous cutaneous carcinoma had a relative risk of 10.22 (99 per cent confidence limits, 4.78 to 37.08). A higher than expected proportion of squamous-cell carcinomas and an excess of squamous-cell carcinomas in areas not exposed to sun were seen. New patients with known histories of ionizing-radiation exposure or of skin tumors should be given 8-methyoxypsoralen photochemotherapy only if they understand the risks and have disabling psoriasis untreatable by other means. (N Engl J Med 300:809–813, 1979)This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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