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Risk factors for basal cell carcinoma in the UK: case-control study in 806 patients.

Lear, J T; Tan, B B; Smith, A G; Bowers, W; Jones, P W; Heagerty, A H; Strange, R C; Fryer, A A

Authors

J T Lear

B B Tan

A G Smith

W Bowers

P W Jones

A H Heagerty

R C Strange



Abstract

Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the commonest malignant neoplasm in white people. We present a large UK case-control study in which conditional logistic regression analysis of age-matched and gender-matched data sets was used to compare, first, cases with controls (n=403) and second, patients having multiple BCC with those having a single BCC (n=278). Eye/hair colour, occupation, skin type, social class, tumour site at presentation and smoking history were assessed.
Social class 1/2, skin type 1, red/blonde hair and blue/green eyes were all related to BCC risk, social class most strongly (odds ratio 2.36, P=0.007). Truncal site at presentation was a risk factor for the development of multiple BCC (odds ratio 4.03, P=0.002).
These data support the view that genetically mediated differences in ultraviolet responsiveness are important in BCC, though the scale of their effect is small. They may be exploitable in primary and secondary prevention as well as giving insights into pathogenesis. In particular, the fact that patients presenting with a truncal tumour are at increased risk of further BCC suggests that intermittent exposure in genetically predisposed individuals may contribute to a cancer susceptibility syndrome.

Citation

Lear, J. T., Tan, B. B., Smith, A. G., Bowers, W., Jones, P. W., Heagerty, A. H., …Fryer, A. A. (1997). Risk factors for basal cell carcinoma in the UK: case-control study in 806 patients. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 90(7), https://doi.org/10.1177/014107689709000704

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 1997-07
Deposit Date Apr 19, 2024
Journal Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
Print ISSN 0141-0768
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 90
Issue 7
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/014107689709000704
PMID 9290417