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Incidence and prognosis of cutaneous melanoma in European adolescents and young adults (AYAs): EUROCARE-6 retrospective cohort results.

Authors :
Indini, Alice
Didoné, Fabio
Massi, Daniela
Puig, Susana
Casadevall, Jordi Rubio
Bennett, Damien
Katalinic, Alexander
Sanvisens, Arantza
Ferrari, Andrea
Lasalvia, Paolo
Demuru, Elena
Ragusa, Rosalia
Mayer-da-Silva, Alexandra
Blum, Marcel
Mousavi, Mohsen
Kuehni, Claudia
Mihor, Ana
Mandalà, Mario
Trama, Annalisa
Source :
European Journal of Cancer. Dec2024, Vol. 213, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cutaneous melanoma (CM) is rare in adolescents and young adults (AYA, 15–39 years at cancer diagnosis) and studies on CM in AYAs are scarce. Our aim is to update CM incidence and survival in European AYAs and to compare incidence and survival both with other age groups and over time. We used the EUROCARE-6 database (108 cancer registries; 29 EU countries), calculating incidence rates (IR) per 100,000 individuals/year in the European population (years of diagnosis: 2006–2013), 5-year relative survival (RS), and 5-year RS conditional to surviving the first year after diagnosis, for the follow-up period 2010–2014 (cases diagnosed in 2006–2013). The IR of CM in AYA was greater in females than in males, standing at 7. CM IR was higher in the limbs and lower in the head and neck (H&N) and trunk in females compared to males. Five-year RS was 94 % in AYA and 80 % in older age groups. Survival was higher in limb than in H&N and trunk CM. The incidence of CM increased more in older age groups than in AYA. CM survival rose over time for all ages. Differences in IR between males and females may be due to different behaviors and CM biology. The increase in survival can be attributed to healthcare improvements, early diagnosis, and locoregional surgical treatments. The incidence trends are reassuring in terms of tumor burden in AYA. Our findings support the idea that CM is more aggressive with increasing age and gender differences partially explain survival differences between age groups. • Cutaneous melanoma (CM) is more common in young females and older males. • Five-year RS was 94 % in AYA and 80 % in older adults. • Gender differences partially explain survival differences between age groups • The increase in CM incidence was greater in older adults and the elderly than in AYA • CM survival increased over time for all age groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
213
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181058423
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2024.115079