Photo Credit: Canadian Skin Cancer Foundation |
Skin cancer is the most common
form of human cancer equal to 50% of all cancers in N. America. Over the past
30 years, more patients had skin cancer than the combined total of all other
cancers. There are no exact figures as recording of cases is incomplete. Up to
4 million Americans and 120,000 Canadians will develop a skin cancer this year.
One in six Canadians and one in five Americans will develop a skin cancer
within their lifetime. More alarming, is the rising rate for all skin cancer
but particularly the rate for melanoma. There has been an 8X or 800% increase
in melanoma in young females and a 4-fold or 400% increase in young males over
the past 30 years. Melanoma is the most common form of cancer for young adults
25-29 years old and the second most common form of cancer for young people age
15-25.
Up to 90%of non-melanoma skin
cancer (NMSC) and 60% of melanoma is potentially preventable. The Lewin Group
report direct and indirect costs for skin cancer care in the USA at 5.5 billion
and climbing. The Canadian Partnership Against Cancer Report (February 2010)
estimates that we now spend more than $ 600 million annually. In Canada up to
1/4 million cases of skin cancer could cost over a $ billion by 2030.
The use of scarce health care
dollars to treat a potentially preventable disease mandates a new direction.
There is an effective hierarchy of skin cancer prevention. It starts with
educating all people on simple sun safety behavior. Later postings will deal
with this in detail. The final step in the hierarchy is the use of effective
sunscreens. Australian doctors have shown that daily use of a sunscreen to
exposed areas reduced the incidence of melanoma by about 50%. Their sunscreens
were older formulations and new innovations with modern sunscreens bring
greater promise to further reduce all types of skin cancer.
The potential of balanced
sunscreens that give as much UVA protection as UVB is exciting, compared to the
limitations and dangers of unbalanced UVB-biased sunscreens, with minimal UVA
protection presently dominating the market in N. America. A few UV filters are
able to achieve a balanced UVB to UVA protection approaching unity. More about this subject in my next post.
Denis K. Dudley, M.D.
Denis K. Dudley, M.D.