Gray D T, Suman V J, Su W P, Clay R P, Harmsen W S, Roenigk R K
Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn, USA.
Arch Dermatol. 1997 Jun;133(6):735-40.
To examine the incidence of first diagnosis of invasive squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the skin over time.
Retrospective, population-based incidence study.
Enumerated, geographically isolated, semiurban population served by the Mayo Clinic and its affiliated hospitals and the Olmsted Medical Center, including its affiliated hospital in Rochester, Minn.
Using the Rochester Epidemiology Project databases that capture virtually all medical care provided to the residents of Rochester, we identified and reviewed records of all documented residents in whom histologically proven, invasive SCC of the skin was first diagnosed between 1984 and 1992. Age and sex stratum-specific rates were calculated, and age-adjusted rates observed over time for individuals aged 35 years or older were analyzed using Poisson regression. Adjusted rates were compared with the results of other studies.
Review of 1630 records identified 511 incidence cases of SCC. Tumors located on the head and neck accounted for 66.4% of tumors in females and 72.9% in males. The annual age- and sex-specific incidence rates per 100,000 increased from 0 cases among males aged 0 to 14 years to 1286.0 cases among males aged 85 years or older. Over time, the annual age-adjusted incidence rates per 100,000 females rose from 46.5 (95% confidence interval [CI], 32.4-60.6) for the 1984 to 1986 period to 99.6 (95% CI, 80.4-118.7) for the 1990 to 1992 period and were 71.2 (95% CI, 61.7-80.8) overall. The corresponding rates for males were 125.9 (95% CI, 95.3-156.4), 191.0 (95% CI, 156.9-225.0), and 155.5 (95% CI, 137.0-174.0). The age- and sex-adjusted SCC incidence rates for the period from 1987 to 1989 and 1990 to 1992 exceeded those for the period from 1984 to 1986 (P = .03 and P < .001, respectively). Our age-adjusted rates for SCC were within the ranges seen in other white populations from temperate climates.
The frequencies of first diagnosis of SCC are increasing at rates beyond those explainable by demographic shifts alone.
研究皮肤浸润性鳞状细胞癌(SCC)首次诊断的发病率随时间的变化情况。
基于人群的回顾性发病率研究。
由梅奥诊所及其附属医院以及奥尔姆斯特德医疗中心服务的一个经普查的、地理上孤立的半城市人口,包括其位于明尼苏达州罗切斯特的附属医院。
利用罗切斯特流行病学项目数据库,该数据库几乎涵盖了为罗切斯特居民提供的所有医疗服务,我们识别并审查了所有记录在案的居民中在1984年至1992年间首次经组织学证实为皮肤浸润性SCC的记录。计算年龄和性别分层的发病率,并使用泊松回归分析35岁及以上个体随时间观察到的年龄调整发病率。将调整后的发病率与其他研究结果进行比较。
对1630份记录的审查确定了511例SCC发病病例。位于头颈部的肿瘤在女性中占66.4%,在男性中占72.9%。每10万人的年度年龄和性别特异性发病率从0至14岁男性中的0例增加到85岁及以上男性中的1286.0例。随着时间的推移,每10万女性的年度年龄调整发病率从1984年至1986年期间的46.5(95%置信区间[CI],32.4 - 60.6)上升到1990年至1992年期间的99.6(95%CI,80.4 - 118.7),总体为71.2(95%CI,61.7 - 80.8)。男性的相应发病率分别为125.9(95%CI,95.3 - 156.4)、191.0(95%CI,156.9 - 225.0)和155.5(95%CI,137.0 - 174.0)。1987年至1989年和1990年至1992年期间的年龄和性别调整后的SCC发病率超过了1984年至1986年期间(分别为P = 0.03和P < 0.001)。我们的SCC年龄调整发病率在其他温带气候白人人群中观察到的范围内。
SCC首次诊断的频率正以超出仅由人口结构变化所能解释的速度增加。