News: Burn injuries do not increase risk of skin cancer
Patients are not at increased risk of skin cancer due to formerly burn injuries, a new Danish follow-up study prove.
139 skin cancers were found, against 189 expected, among patients with
burn injuries. That leave a standardized incidence rate of 0,7. The
reduced risk of skin cancer was mainly a result of reduced risk of
basal cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma. The relative risk of
squamous cell carcinoma was close to expected.
For patients with the most severe burns or with the longest periods of
follow-up there was no consistent increased risk for skin cancer.
The result is based on 16.903 patients, who were suffered either a
thermal or chemical burn during 1978 to 1993. The mean follow-up time
was 15.6 years.
Less exposure to the sun
Dr. Mellemkjaer argue that the reduced risk may be due to less
exposure to the sun after a burn injury. Sun exposure might be
uncomfortable for burned patients or the patients might stay out of the
sun because of cosmetic reasons.
Reference: Mellemkjaer, Lene et al. Risks for Skin and Other Cancers Up to 25 Years After Burn Injuries. Epidemiology. 2006; 17:668-673, November 2006. Accessed November 15th 2006 at www.medscape.com |