Publication date: Jun 17, 2024
The incidence and distribution of cutaneous melanoma differs between the sexes, but it is unclear whether these differences have been constant through time or across generations. We compared incidence trends by age, sex, and anatomic site by analyzing long-term melanoma data (1982-2018) in three populations residing at high-, moderate- and low- ambient sun exposure: Queensland, Australia; United States White; Scotland. We fit age-period-cohort models and compared trends in the male-to-female incidence rate ratio (IRR) by site and sex. In men, melanoma incidence was always highest on the trunk; in women, incidence was historically highest on limbs, but there have been recent increases in truncal melanoma among females in all populations. The IRR showed excess melanoma in females on the lower limb in most age groups in all populations. In contrast, there was a male excess of melanoma on the trunk (from about age 25 years) and head/neck (from about age 40 years) which increased with age. Birth cohort analyses identified ‘turning points’ in incidence from high to low incidence among recent birth cohorts, which differed by population and site. Changing exposure to UV radiation is implicated, possibly superimposed upon innate differences between the sexes in site-specific susceptibility.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Australia | anatomic site |
Dermatol | incidence |
Females | melanoma |
sex |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | melanoma |
pathway | KEGG | Melanoma |