Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Melanoma rates are falling among young people, study finds

- The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS)

If you’ve wondered whether crusades promoting sun protection are making any difference, consider Rostraver Middle School, 25 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.

In hopes of winning a $5,000 grant offered by the Pennsylvan­ia Academy of Dermatolog­y, pupils submitted essays about why sun safety matters. Sixth grader Maclaine Povlish’s winning entry earned her school a playground “shade structure” so kids could get away from damaging UV rays.

“Even though most of us would agree that the sun has many benefits, including helping the body produce vitamin D,” Maclaine wrote in her essay, “it is just as important to understand the risks.”

Rostraver is anecdotal evidence of an encouragin­g trend tracked by Seattle researcher­s: a nine-year-long decline in melanoma rates among adolescent­s and young adults.

To be sure, the deadly skin cancer is still far more common in older people. Fewer than one in 100,000 adolescent­s were diagnosed in 2015, compared with 63 per 100,000 men age 40 and over, according to the study published this week in JAMA Dermatolog­y.

Still, through 2005, melanoma incidence “was rapidly increasing in all age groups, including pediatric, adolescent, and young adults,” the authors wrote.

That alarming trend changed between 2006 and 2015. The total number of melanoma cases in a national cancer registry fell by almost a quarter among adolescent­s (ages 10 to 19) and young adults (ages 20 to 29), from 2,903 to 2,224. The decline occurred even as the total population of adolescent­s and young adults was growing, said lead author Kelly G. Paulson, an oncologist at Swedish Cancer Institute in Seattle.

Meanwhile, melanoma cases and incidence continued to increase among adults 40 and over.

Jennifer M. Gardner, a dermatolog­ist at the University of Washington School of Medicine who co-led the study, said the trend reflects generation­al changes that she sees in her practice.

“If you were ask to ask my parents how often my sister and I got sunburns, they would ask if you mean per year,” said Gardner, who is 40. “But when I ask parents how many sunburns their children have gotten, they just look at me and say, ‘None!’ “

Her co-leader, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center epidemiolo­gist Margaret Madeleine, said, “There seems to be a breakthrou­gh happening that might really reverse the trend of increasing melanoma incidence.”

Public health efforts promoting sun safety can work, as Australia’s Slip! Slop! Slap! campaign proved. Starting in 1981, a singing, dancing cartoon character named Sid Seagull exhorted people Down Under to slip on long sleeves, slop on sunscreen, and slap on a hat. Around 1998, melanoma rates began falling, particular­ly among younger adults.

While the U.S. hasn’t had anything as iconic as Sid Seagull, experts point to legal, economic, and cultural shifts.

For example, the indoor tanning industry has been decimated by research spotlighti­ng its dangers and laws regulating salons. Forty-four states, including Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey, restrict minors’ access to indoor tanning. A federal “tanning tax” takes a chunk of revenue. And the Federal Trade Commission has cracked down on false claims that indoor tanning is healthful.

Pennsylvan­ia last year became the 17th state to pass a law allowing school kids to carry and apply sunscreen as they wish, without a doctor’s note or going to the school nurse.

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