Survivors of melanoma were more likely to limit exposure to the sun than people who had never had the disease, but some still reported seeking out suntans and getting sunburns.
This is according to research published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, led by Rachel Isaksson Vogel, PhD, an assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health at the University of Minnesota.
Incidence of melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, has risen steadily for the past 30 years.
Melanoma is now the sixth most common cancer in the United States, with an estimated 76,380 cases diagnosed in 2016, according to the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program.
Ultraviolet radiation from the sun has been proven to cause melanoma.
In this study, Vogel and colleagues compared sun exposure and protection behaviours in long-term melanoma survivors with those who had never had the disease, asking participants about the amount of time they had spent outdoors in the summer, and about sun protection methods such as wearing sunscreen, staying in the shade, wearing hats, and intentionally tanning.
Participants were also asked to report the number of red or painful sunburns they had experienced in the past year, and whether they had used a tanning bed or booth in the past year.
The study comprised 724 melanoma survivors and 660 controls.
All were between the ages of 25 and 59, and the survivors had been diagnosed with invasive cutaneous melanoma between July 2004 and December 2007.
Overall, Vogel said, the survivors were more likely to report optimal sun protection behaviours than those in the control group. They note:
However, the study revealed suboptimal behaviours in some melanoma survivors.
Nearly 20 percent said they had gotten sunburned in the previous year, and on weekend days, sun exposure was roughly equal between the two groups, with 74.8 percent of the survivors and 79.7 percent of the controls spending more than two hours outside.
"At a time when rates of many cancer types are declining, the rising incidence of melanoma is worrisome," Vogel said. "People who have survived melanoma are at high risk of another diagnosis, so reducing exposure to the sun is really crucial."
Vogel said that in conversations with individuals diagnosed with melanoma, many survivors expressed a desire to "just live their lives," playing with their children, exercising, and socialising outdoors.
She said that in most cases, the participants had been diagnosed with stage 1 disease, when melanoma is often easily treated and has a five-year survival rate of 98 percent.
"Because an early-stage melanoma diagnosis and treatment was likely a fairly minor experience for most survivors, they might not understand how serious an illness this is," Vogel said. "Survivors of melanoma have a nearly nine-fold risk of developing melanoma again, and they can reduce that risk if they make sun protection a priority."
Vogel noted that one limitation of the study is that data on second primary melanomas--a new diagnosis at a different site than the initial diagnosis-- were not available for all participants.
Also, she said, it is possible that some subjects over-reported their sun protection behaviours.
Source: AACR
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