Parker Eva Rawlings
Department of Dermatology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
Int J Womens Dermatol. 2020 Jul 17;7(1):17-27. doi: 10.1016/j.ijwd.2020.07.003. eCollection 2021 Jan.
Climate change is broadly affecting human health, with grave concern that continued warming of the earth's atmosphere will result is serious harm. Since the mid-20th century, skin cancer incidence rates have risen at an alarming rate worldwide.
This review examines the relationship between climate change and cutaneous carcinogenesis.
A literature review used the National Institutes of Health databases (PubMed and Medline), the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results and International Agency for Research on Cancer registries, and published reports by federal and international agencies and consortia, including the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Climate and Clean Air Coalition, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, United Nations Environment Programme, World Health Organization, and World Meteorological Organization.
Skin cancer risk is determined by multiple factors, with exposure to ultraviolet radiation being the most important. Strong circumstantial evidence supports the hypothesis that factors related to climate change, including stratospheric ozone depletion, global warming, and ambient air pollution, have likely contributed to the increasing incidence of cutaneous malignancy globally and will continue to impose a negative on influence skin cancer incidence for many decades to come.
Because much of the data are based on animal studies and computer simulations, establishing a direct and definitive link remains challenging. More epidemiologic studies are needed to prove causality in skin cancer, but the evidence for overall harm to human health as a direct result of climate change is clear. Global action to mitigate these negative impacts to humans and the environment is imperative.
气候变化正广泛影响着人类健康,人们严重担忧地球大气持续变暖将造成严重危害。自20世纪中叶以来,全球皮肤癌发病率以惊人的速度上升。
本综述探讨气候变化与皮肤癌发生之间的关系。
文献综述使用了美国国立卫生研究院数据库(PubMed和Medline)、监测、流行病学和最终结果数据库以及国际癌症研究机构的登记处,以及联邦和国际机构及联盟发表的报告,包括澳大利亚卫生与福利研究所、气候与清洁空气联盟、美国环境保护局、政府间气候变化专门委员会、美国国家航空航天局、美国国家海洋和大气管理局、联合国环境规划署、世界卫生组织和世界气象组织。
皮肤癌风险由多种因素决定,其中紫外线辐射暴露是最重要的因素。有力的间接证据支持这样的假设,即与气候变化相关的因素,包括平流层臭氧消耗、全球变暖和环境空气污染,可能导致了全球皮肤恶性肿瘤发病率的上升,并将在未来几十年继续对皮肤癌发病率产生负面影响。
由于大部分数据基于动物研究和计算机模拟,建立直接和明确的联系仍然具有挑战性。需要更多的流行病学研究来证明皮肤癌的因果关系,但气候变化直接对人类健康造成总体危害的证据是明确的。必须采取全球行动来减轻这些对人类和环境的负面影响。