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Does the morphology of cutaneous melanoma help to explain the international differences in survival? Results from 1 578 482 adults diagnosed during 2000-2014 in 59 countries (CONCORD-3).

Veronica Di CarloCharles A StillerNora EisemannAndrea BordoniMelissa MatzMaria P CuradoLaetitia Daubisse-MarliacMikhail ValkovJean-Luc BulliardDavid MorrisonChris JohnsonFabio GirardiRafael Marcos-GrageraMario ŠekerijaSiri LarønningenEunice SirriMichel P ColemanClaudia Allemaninull null
Published in: The British journal of dermatology (2022)
This study provides the broadest picture of distribution and population-based survival trends for the main morphological subtypes of cutaneous melanoma in 59 countries. The poorer prognosis for nodular and acral lentiginous melanomas, more frequent in Asia and Latin America, suggests the need for health policies aimed at specific populations to improve awareness, early diagnosis and access to treatment. What is already known about this topic? The histopathological features of cutaneous melanoma vary markedly worldwide. The proportion of melanomas with the more aggressive acral lentiginous or nodular histological subtypes is higher in populations with predominantly dark skin than in populations with predominantly fair skin. What does this study add? We aimed to assess the extent to which these differences in morphology may explain international variation in survival when all histological subtypes are combined. This study provides, for the first time, international comparisons of population-based survival at 5 years for the main histological subtypes of melanoma for over 1.5 million adults diagnosed during 2000-2014. This study highlights the less favourable distribution of histological subtypes in Asia and Central and South America, and the poorer prognosis for nodular and acral lentiginous melanomas. We found that later stage at diagnosis does not fully explain the higher excess risk of death for nodular and acral lentiginous melanoma compared with superficial spreading melanoma.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • skin cancer
  • free survival
  • wound healing
  • climate change
  • combination therapy
  • replacement therapy