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Solar elastosis and cutaneous melanoma: A site-specific analysis

Authors :
Catherine Baxter
Marina Kvaskoff
Dominic Wood
David C. Whiteman
Adèle C. Green
Rohan Mortimore
Marcia Davis
Joe Triscott
Nirmala Pandeya
Richard Williamson
Lorraine Westacott
Susan Perry
Source :
International Journal of Cancer. 136:2900-2911
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

Cutaneous melanomas are postulated to arise through at least two causal pathways, namely the "chronic sun exposure" and "nevus" pathways. While chronic sun exposure probably causes many head/neck melanomas, its role at other sites is unclear. In a population-based, case-case comparison study conducted in Brisbane, Australia, we determined the prevalence and epidemiologic correlates of chronic solar damage in skin adjacent to invasive, incident melanomas on the trunk (n-=-418) or head/neck (n-=-92) among patients aged 18-79 in 2007-2010. Participants self-reported information about environmental and phenotypic factors, and a dermatologist counted nevi and actinic keratoses. Dermatopathologists assessed solar elastosis adjacent to each melanoma using a four-point scale (nil, mild, moderate, marked), and noted the presence or absence of adjacent neval remnants. We measured associations between various factors and solar elastosis using polytomous logistic regression. Marked or moderate solar elastosis was observed in 10% and 27%, respectively, of trunk melanomas, and 60% and 17%, respectively, of head/neck melanomas. At both sites, marked elastosis was positively associated with age (p

Details

ISSN :
00207136
Volume :
136
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ba5bdd0d2ffdd305e99f6951efc0335e