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The burden of malignant melanoma--lessons to be learned from Austria. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the incidence rates of melanoma in Austria, highlighting inconsistencies in reporting due to decentralized diagnosis and comparing findings with national/international cancer registries.
  • In 2011, 5246 melanoma cases were reported, revealing that the incidence rate for invasive melanomas was significantly higher than previously recorded, particularly in western Austria, where the diagnosis of thin melanomas showed stark regional differences.
  • The findings indicate that the melanoma burden in Austria may be underestimated, raising concerns about the accuracy of cancer data in Europe and suggesting potential overdiagnosis of early-stage melanomas based on varying diagnostic thresholds among pathologists.

Article Abstract

Aim Of Study: Incidence rates of melanoma, generated by cancer registries (CRs), are susceptible to reporting inconsistencies due to increasing decentralisation of diagnosis. We therefore independently assessed the burden of melanoma in Austria.

Methods: We collected histopathological reports on melanoma of all patients diagnosed in Austria in 2011. Demographic and clinical characteristics, histopathological tumour stages were assessed. Their regional distributions and incidence rates were analysed and compared with data of national and international CRs.

Results: A total of 5246 patients were diagnosed with 1951 in-situ and 3295 invasive melanomas in Austria in 2011 (population 8.4 million). Age, sex and anatomic distribution corresponded to findings in other European countries, however, the incidence of 25/100,000 (world age-standardised rate) for invasive melanomas was two-fold higher than published by the Austrian CR (12/100,000). Varying frequencies in diagnosing thin melanomas (≤1 mm; n = 4415) accounted exclusively for significant regional disparities, while advanced tumours (>1 mm; n = 761) were evenly distributed. Western Austria showed the highest rates (36/100,000). Patients from eastern Austria whose melanomas were diagnosed in laboratories in western Austria (n = 76) showed significantly higher proportions of in-situ lesions (n = 43; 57%) compared to those whose tumours were diagnosed in eastern Austria (n = 4014; in-situ = 1369; 34%) (p < 0.0001).

Conclusions: In Austria, the melanoma burden and its potential socio-economic implications are significantly underestimated. Similarities of incidences indicate this could affect other European countries with well-established CRs and compromise international comparability of data. Austrian regional disparities suggest overdiagnosis of thin melanomas due to the variability of pathologists' thresholds for the diagnosis of early stage tumours.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2015.11.026DOI Listing

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