Common Skin Cancer a Chronic Condition, Study Says
Here’s yet another reason to go easy on the tanning this summer: A new study affirms that basal cell carcinoma, the most common form of skin cancer, should be viewed as a chronic disease.
That’s because once most people have a single occurrence, they are at risk of getting another.
“Basal cell carcinoma has generally been viewed as something that comes up, is treated and cured,” said Dr. Martin Weinstock, a study co-author and professor of dermatology at the Warren Alpert Medical School at Brown University in Providence, R.I. “For someone with an isolated lesion, that’s a reasonable way of looking at it. But most people are constantly at risk of this and will be getting more.”
The study confirmed what was commonly understood about the disease: a prior history of basal cell carcinoma is the greatest risk for another lesion. But the research found that eczema may also predict a recurrence among those at high risk for the disease. Those with a family history of eczema had a 1.54 times greater risk than those without.
Older age, sun sensitivity, intense sun exposure before age 30, and use of certain blood pressure-lowering medications (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers) were also associated with increased risk.
Why would eczema, a chronic skin disorder that involves scaly and itchy rashes, be associated with basal cell carcinoma? Weinstock said it’s unclear. “There may be some differences in these people’s immune systems compared to people without eczema,” he said, noting that other investigators need to confirm the findings.
Having other types of skin cancer or actinic keratoses (scaly or crusty growths caused by sun damage) did not appear to raise the chances for basal cell carcinoma.
The study was published online July 19 in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology and funded by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. It involved more than 1,100 people, nearly all men, all veterans, with a median age of 72.
On average, each participant had more than three instances of basal cell cancer or squamous cell cancer (another type of skin cancer) before participating in the
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