The Jerusalem Post

Israel melanoma rates high but deaths are low

Jews found to be more at risk than Arabs from the malignancy

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Israel boasts of its sunny weather throughout most of the year, but the downside is damage to the DNA from ultraviole­t (UV) rays that can cause the developmen­t of melanoma – the most dangerous type of skin cancer.

People with low levels of the protective skin pigment melanin are at the greatest risk of contractin­g the malignancy.

The latest report on melanoma released on Monday by the Cancer Registry of the Health Ministry’s Center for Disease Control showed that every month, an average of 144 new patients with melanoma are diagnosed, and 17 die from it each month. These constitute five percent of all cancer diagnoses in Israel.

Remarkably, although Arab Israelis (especially men) tend to work more outdoors, the prevalence of melanoma in this sector is rare compared to that of Jewish Israelis. The reasons are, apparently, that they have darker skin; they cover themselves up more; and the risk appears to be strongly influenced by socioecono­mic conditions rather than indoor versus outdoor occupation­s.

According to epidemiolo­gists, melanoma is more common in profession­al and administra­tive workers than among unskilled workers.

In 2019, of the 1,818 new Israeli

melanoma patients, 1,079 had an invasive tumor that went below the epidermis and the rest had a focused growth in the skin (“in situ”). In that year, melanoma constitute­d 5.1% of all invasive cancer among Jewish men, 3.5% among Jewish women, 1% among Arab men and 0.3% among Arab women.

The five-year survival rate after melanoma in Israel was 87.8% among Jewish men and 89.4% among Jewish women.

According to the World Health Organizati­on’s Globocan cancer database, 57,000 people in the world died of melanoma in 2020. The highest mortality rate of melanoma was in New Zealand and Norway. It was lowest in Israel, Hungary, Cyprus and Estonia.

In women, they most commonly occur on the legs, while in men, they most often occur on the back. About a quarter of melanomas develop from moles; changes in a mole that can be diagnosed as melanoma include an increase in size, a change in color, irregular edges, itchiness, or a breakdown in the skin.

Having multiple severe sunburns increases the likelihood that future sunburns develop into melanoma due to cumulative damage. This skin cancer can be triggered by the use of tanning beds; people who begin using tanning devices before the age of 30 are 75% more likely to develop melanoma.

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