Department of Dermatology, Pigmented Lesion and Melanoma Program, Stanford University Medical Center and Stanford Cancer Center, Stanford, California 94063, USA.
Cancer. 2011 Jan 1;117(1):152-61. doi: 10.1002/cncr.25355. Epub 2010 Aug 24.
The incidence patterns and socioeconomic distribution of cutaneous melanoma among Hispanics are poorly understood.
The authors obtained population-based incidence data for all Hispanic and non-Hispanic white (NHW) patients who were diagnosed with invasive cutaneous melanoma from 1988 to 2007 in California. By using a neighborhood-level measure of socioeconomic status (SES), the variables investigated included incidence, thickness at diagnosis, histologic subtype, anatomic site, and the relative risk (RR) for thicker (>2 mm) versus thinner (≤ 2 mm) tumors at diagnosis for groups categorized by SES.
Age-adjusted melanoma incidence rates per million were higher in NHWs (P < .0001), and tumor thickness at diagnosis was greater in Hispanics (P < .0001). Sixty-one percent of melanomas in NHWs occurred in the High SES group. Among Hispanics, only 35% occurred in the High SES group; and 22% occurred in the Low SES group. Lower SES was associated with thicker tumors (P < .0001); this association was stronger in Hispanics. The RR of thicker tumors versus thinner tumors (≤ 2 mm) in the Low SES group versus the High SES group was 1.48 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.37-1.61) for NHW men and 2.18 (95% CI, 1.73-2.74) for Hispanic men. Patients with lower SES had less of the superficial spreading melanoma subtype (especially among Hispanic men) and more of the nodular melanoma subtype. Leg/hip melanomas were associated with higher SES in NHW men but with lower SES in Hispanic men.
The socioeconomic distribution of melanoma incidence and tumor thickness differed substantially between Hispanic and NHW Californians, particularly among men. Melanoma prevention efforts targeted to lower SES Hispanics and increased physician awareness of melanoma patterns among Hispanics are needed.
西班牙裔人群中皮肤黑色素瘤的发病模式和社会经济分布情况了解甚少。
作者从加利福尼亚州获取了 1988 年至 2007 年间所有被诊断为侵袭性皮肤黑色素瘤的西班牙裔和非西班牙裔白人(NHW)患者的基于人群的发病率数据。利用社会经济地位(SES)的邻里水平衡量标准,调查的变量包括发病率、诊断时的肿瘤厚度、组织学亚型、解剖部位以及按 SES 分类的组中诊断时较厚(>2 毫米)与较薄(≤2 毫米)肿瘤的相对风险(RR)。
每百万人口的年龄调整后黑色素瘤发病率在 NHW 中较高(P<.0001),且西班牙裔人群中诊断时的肿瘤厚度更大(P<.0001)。NHW 人群中 61%的黑色素瘤发生在高 SES 组。而在西班牙裔人群中,只有 35%发生在高 SES 组;22%发生在低 SES 组。较低的 SES 与较厚的肿瘤相关(P<.0001);这种关联在西班牙裔人群中更强。低 SES 组与高 SES 组相比,较厚肿瘤(>2 毫米)与较薄肿瘤(≤2 毫米)的 RR 为 NHW 男性 1.48(95%置信区间[CI],1.37-1.61),西班牙裔男性 2.18(95%CI,1.73-2.74)。SES 较低的患者中,浅表扩散型黑色素瘤亚型(尤其是西班牙裔男性)较少,而结节性黑色素瘤亚型较多。NHW 男性的腿部/臀部黑色素瘤与较高 SES 相关,而西班牙裔男性的腿部/臀部黑色素瘤与较低 SES 相关。
西班牙裔和 NHW 加利福尼亚人之间黑色素瘤发病率和肿瘤厚度的社会经济分布存在显著差异,尤其是在男性中。需要针对 SES 较低的西班牙裔人群开展黑色素瘤预防工作,并提高医生对西班牙裔人群中黑色素瘤模式的认识。