Conference Coverage

VIDEO: U.S. melanoma incidence hits all-time high


 

REPORTING FROM AAD 18

U.S. annual melanoma incidence rates steadily climbed in recent years, bucking the trend of flat or dropping rates for most other U.S. cancers.

“Nobody’s quite sure why the [melanoma] rates are still rising so dramatically,” Darrell S. Rigel, MD, said in a video interview during the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. The increase remains even after adjustment of incidence rates for the increasing mean age of U.S. adults.

The American Cancer Society reported that the estimated annual incidence rate for invasive melanoma will be 91,270 cases for 2018, following what the society called a rapid rise in the rate for the past 30 years. Add to that the estimate of more than 87,000 U.S. cases of in situ melanoma for an overall annual U.S. rate of 178,560, Dr. Rigel said.

Melanoma has a latency of 5-20 years, “so what we’re seeing right now are the effects of what happened 5, 10, or 20 years ago,” said Dr. Rigel, a dermatologist at New York University.

During a talk at the meeting, Dr. Rigel said that based on current incident levels he projected a lifetime U.S. incidence rate of invasive melanoma of one case for every 40 adults by the end of this decade, and a lifetime incidence rate for either invasive or in situ melanoma of one case for every 20 adults by 2020.

A positive trend is that for the first time, the number of melanoma deaths has started to fall, with an estimated 9,320 deaths from melanoma in 2018 according to American Cancer Society statistics, down from a peak of 10,130 melanoma deaths in 2016, Dr. Rigel said.

Recommended Reading

For Latinos, misperceptions and lack of medical care make preventing melanoma risky business
MDedge Internal Medicine
Get ready for cancer immunotherapy-induced rheumatic diseases
MDedge Internal Medicine
SLE linked to subsequent risk of malignant melanoma
MDedge Internal Medicine
Modern estrogen ‘microdoses’ in contraceptives did not increase risk of melanoma
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mole count predicted melanoma death, especially among men
MDedge Internal Medicine
Skin cancer procedures up by 35% since 2012
MDedge Internal Medicine
California study indicates increased melanoma incidence is real
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pembrolizumab, nivolumab linked to 3% rate of neurologic events
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lithium may reduce melanoma risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Melanoma incidence increased in older non-Hispanic whites
MDedge Internal Medicine