Biologic markers of sun exposure and melanoma risk in women: Pooled case-control analysis

Olsen, C.M. et al. (2010) Biologic markers of sun exposure and melanoma risk in women: Pooled case-control analysis. International Journal of Cancer, (doi: 10.1002/ijc.25691)

Full text not currently available from Enlighten.

Publisher's URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.25691

Abstract

A model has been proposed whereby melanomas arise through two distinct pathways dependent on the relative influence of host susceptibility and sun exposure. Such pathways may explain site-specific patterns of melanoma occurrence. To explore this model, we investigated the relationship between melanoma risk and general markers of acute (recalled sunburns) and chronic (prevalent solar keratoses) sun exposure, stratified by anatomic site and host phenotype. Our working hypothesis was that head and neck melanomas have stronger associations with solar keratoses and weaker associations with sunburn than trunk melanomas. We conducted a collaborative analysis using original data from women subjects of 11 case–control studies of melanoma (2,575 cases, 3,241 controls). We adjusted for potential confounding effects of sunlamp use and sunbathing. The magnitude of sunburn associations did not differ significantly by melanoma site, nevus count or histologic subtype of melanoma. Across all sites, relative risk of melanoma increased with an increasing number of reported lifetime "painful" sunburns, lifetime "severe" sunburns and "severe" sunburns in youth (ptrend < 0.001), with pooled odds ratios (pORs) for the highest category of sunburns versus no sunburns of 3.22 [95% confidence interval (CI) 2.04–5.09] for lifetime "painful" sunburns, 2.10 (95%CI 1.30–3.38) for lifetime "severe" sunburns and 2.43 (95%CI 1.61–3.65) for "severe" sunburns in youth. Solar keratoses strongly increased the risk of head and neck melanoma (pOR 4.91, 95%CI 2.10–11.46), but data were insufficient to assess risk for other sites. Reported sunburn is strongly associated with melanoma on all major body sites.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Mackie, Professor Rona
Authors: Olsen, C.M., Zens, M.S., Green, A.C., Stukel, T.A., Holman, C.D.J., Mack, T., Elwood, J.M., Holly, E.A., Sacerdote, C., Gallagher, R., Swerdlow, A.J., Armstrong, B.K., Rosso, S., Kirkpatrick, C., Zanetti, R., Bishop, J.N., Bataille, V., Chang, Y.M., Mackie, R., Østerlind, A., Berwick, M., Karagas, M.R., and Whiteman, D.C.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name:International Journal of Cancer
Publisher:John Wiley and Sons
ISSN:0020-7136
Published Online:16 November 2010

University Staff: Request a correction | Enlighten Editors: Update this record