Epidemiology of cutaneous malignant melanoma in Western Sweden
Abstract
The incidence of cutaneous malignant melanoma (melanoma) has been rising worldwide for the
past decades, causing a major public health problem. The overall aim for this thesis was to study the
epidemiology of melanoma in Western Sweden and to suggest secondary preventive interventions.
In study I, data from the Swedish Cancer Registry demonstrated that the melanoma incidence in
Western Sweden quadrupled among men and tripled among women between 1970-2007. Coastal
areas and the city of Gothenburg showed a higher incidence than inland areas. Analysis of meteorological
maps of Western Sweden and a sun exposure survey showed that this could be due to high
annual average duration of sunshine and high sun exposure on holidays abroad. In studies II and III,
data from the Swedish Melanoma Registry and the Swedish Cause of Death Registry were analysed.
Study II showed that, during 1990-2013, 7.4% of all melanoma patients developed multiple primary
melanomas. Subsequent melanomas presented with a higher proportion of melanoma in situ. Study
III demonstrated that thin melanomas (≤1 mm Breslow) constituted 55.2% of all invasive melanomas
and accounted for 14.7% of all melanoma deaths, between 1990-2014. Significantly poorer survival
was identified for ulcerated melanomas 0.26-1 mm Breslow and for non-ulcerated melanomas 0.76-
1 mm Breslow. In study IV, a system dynamics computer model was developed that projected the
number of future melanoma cases. The model compared five plausible future scenarios, showing
that after ten years, improved overall secondary prevention would have resulted in a shift towards
thinner melanomas.
This thesis concluded that the high incidence of melanoma in Western Sweden justifies a focus on
preventive interventions to this area. Patients and physicians need to be alerted about the risk of
multiple primary melanomas. The identified subgroup of lethal thin melanomas suggests that these
patients may benefit from closer surveillance in follow-up programmes. Lastly, system dynamics
modelling proved to be a valuable tool, which can help policymakers select the preventive interventions
with the greatest impact.
Parts of work
I. Claeson M, Andersson EM, Wallin M, Wastensson G, Wennberg AM, Paoli J, Gonzalez H.
Incidence of cutaneous melanoma in Western Sweden, 1970-2007. Melanoma research 2012; 22(5):392-398. ::doi::10.1097/CMR.0b013e32835861d6 II. Claeson M, Holmström P, Hallberg S, Gillstedt M, Gonzalez H, Wennberg AM, Paoli J.
Multiple primary melanomas: a common occurrence in Western Sweden. Accepted for publication in Acta Derm Venereol. III. Claeson M, Gillstedt M, Whiteman DC, Paoli J. Lethal melanomas: a population-based registry
study in Western Sweden from 1990-2014. Submitted. IV. Claeson M, Hallberg S, Holmström P, Wennberg AM, Gonzalez H, Paoli J. Modelling the future: System dynamics in the cutaneous malignant melanoma care pathway. Acta Derm Venereol. 2016;96(2): 181-185. ´::doi::10.2340/00015555-2222
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Clincial Sciences. Department of Dermatology and Venereology
Disputation
Torsdagen den 15 december 2016, klockan 9.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3, Göteborg
Date of defence
2016-12-15
magdalena.claeson@vgregion.se
Date
2016-11-23Author
Claeson, Magdalena
Keywords
Cutaneous malignant melanoma
Epidemiology
Prevention
Incidence
Mortality
Multiple primary melanomas
Thin melanomas
System dynamics modelling
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
ISBN 978-91-628-9934-9 (PRINT)
ISBN 978-91-628-9933-2 (PDF)
Language
eng