The association of smoking and socioeconomic status on cutaneous melanoma: a population-based, data-linkage, case-control study.
John Alexander Gerald GibsonThomas D DobbsR GriffithsJ SongA AkbariS WhitakerA WatkinsS M LanganH A HutchingsR A LyonsI S WhitakerPublished in: The British journal of dermatology (2019)
Our study has demonstrated that smoking appeared to be associated with reduced incidence of melanoma. Although smoking increases overall mortality, no association was observed with melanoma-specific mortality. Further work is required to determine if there is a biological mechanism underlying this relationship or an alternative explanation, such as survival bias. What's already known about this topic? Previous studies have been contradictory with both negative and positive associations between smoking and the incidence of melanoma reported. Previous studies have either been limited by publication bias because of selective reporting or underpowered. What does this study add? Our large study identified an inverse association between smoking status and melanoma incidence. Although smoking status was negatively associated with overall disease survival, no significant association was noted in melanoma-specific survival. Socioeconomic status remains closely associated with melanoma. Although higher socioeconomic populations are more likely to develop the disease, patients with lower socioeconomic status continue to have a worse prognosis.