Sun exposure and melanoma survival: A GEM study

  • Marianne Berwick
  • , Anne S. Reiner
  • , Susan Paine
  • , Bruce K. Armstrong
  • , Anne Kricker
  • , Chris Goumas
  • , Anne E. Cust
  • , Nancy E. Thomas
  • , Pamela A. Groben
  • , Lynn From
  • , Klaus Busam
  • , Irene Orlow
  • , Loraine D. Marrett
  • , Richard P. Gallagher
  • , Stephen B. Gruber
  • , Hoda Anton-Culver
  • , Stefano Rosso
  • , Roberto Zanetti
  • , Peter A. Kanetsky
  • , Terry Dwyer
  • Alison Venn, Julia Lee-Taylor, Colin B. Begg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background:Wepreviously reported a significant association between higherUVradiation exposure before diagnosis and greater survival with melanoma in a population-based study in Connecticut. We sought to evaluate the hypothesis that sun exposure before diagnosis was associated with greater survival in a larger, international population-based study with more detailed exposure information. Methods: We conducted a multicenter, international population-based study in four countries-Australia, Italy, Canada, and the United States-with 3,578 cases of melanoma with an average of 7.4 years of follow-up. Measures of sun exposure included sunburn, intermittent exposure, hours of holiday sun exposure, hours of water-related outdoor activities, ambient ultraviolet B (280-320 nm) dose, histologic solar elastosis, and season of diagnosis. Results: Results were not strongly supportive of the earlier hypothesis. Having had any sunburn in 1 year within 10 years of diagnosis was inversely associated with survival; solar elastosis-a measure of lifetime cumulative exposure-was not. In addition, none of the intermittent exposure measures-water-related activities and sunny holidays-were associated with melanoma-specific survival. Estimated ambient UVB dose was not associated with survival. Conclusion: Although there was an apparent protective effect of sunburns within 10 years of diagnosis, there was only weak evidence in this large, international, population-based study of melanoma that sun exposure before diagnosis is associated with greater melanoma-specific survival. Impact: This study adds to the evidence that sun exposure before melanoma diagnosis has little effect on survival with melanoma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2145-2152
Number of pages8
JournalCancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention
Volume23
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2014
Externally publishedYes

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