Abstract

Simple SummaryThe occurrence of melanoma in the United States is increasing over time. We examined trends in melanoma by birth year and age groups to determine if individuals born more recently experience higher rates of melanoma as they age. We examined these trends separately among men and women and by the location on the body that the melanoma occurred. Melanoma incidence has continued to increase across more recent birth years and varies by body site and sex. Melanoma incidence will likely continue to increase as younger individuals age. While these are mostly thin melanomas, treatment to prevent cancer progression is still costly, both economically and emotionally, for patients.The incidence of malignant melanoma in the United States is increasing, possibly due to changes in ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure due to lifestyle or increased awareness and diagnosis of melanoma. To determine if more recent birth cohorts experience higher rates of melanoma as they age, we examined age and birth cohort trends in the United States stratified by anatomic site and cancer type (in situ vs. malignant) of the melanoma diagnosed from 1975–2017. Poisson regression of cutaneous melanoma cases per population for 1975–2017 from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) cancer registries was used to estimate age adjusted incidence for five-year birth cohorts restricted to Whites, ages 15–84. The rate of melanoma incidence across birth cohorts varies by anatomic site and sex. Melanomas at all anatomic sites continue to increase, except for head and neck melanomas in men. Much of the increase in malignant melanoma is driven by cases of thin (<1.5 mm) lesions. While increased skin exams may contribute to the increased incidence of in situ and thin melanoma observed across birth cohorts, the shifts in anatomic site of highest melanoma incidence across birth cohorts suggest changes in UVR exposure may also play a role.

Highlights

  • Cutaneous melanoma is the fifth most common cancer in the United States (US) [1]

  • Among the 168,488 cases of malignant melanoma and the 52,995 cases of in situ melanoma included in analysis, the majority were male (55.7% and 56.8%, respectively) and slightly over half (52.8% and 50.6%, respectively) were born after 1944 (Table 1)

  • The situ melanoma continues to sharply increase more recent cohorts, trends suggest that incidence of malignant head and neck melanomas in men may become in situ melanomas of the trunk and the head and neck, while the rate of increase in maligequivalent to those of trunk melanomas

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Summary

Introduction

Cutaneous melanoma is the fifth most common cancer in the United States (US) [1]. As the deadliest of the three main types of skin cancer, melanoma mortality accounts for 1.1%of all cancer deaths in the US [1]. Similar period trends are documented in Australia and Europe [4,5,6]. This increase is hypothesized to be due to changes over time in both skin screening practices and ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure [7,8,9]. Greater public awareness and more skin screenings by dermatologists have facilitated more diagnoses of melanomas, for in situ and thin lesions [7,8]. Prior research indicates that anatomic site of the melanoma lesion is correlated with the pattern of UVR exposure (chronic vs intermittent) and varies by sex [13,14,15,16,17]

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