As has that of many others, thanks to cancer prevention messages.
Madeleine said various measures taken over the last 10 years — state laws banning the use of tanning beds for minors, parents consistently using sunscreen on their children, people using more sun protection like hats and sunglasses and long sleeves — have definitely moved the needle on melanoma rates.
“I have educated my son on this his entire life,” Vollmar acknowledged. “I think he was the whitest boy on the beach this summer.”
And that’s just fine with him.
“I think tanning is ridiculous,” said Kyler Vollmar, a 21-year-old college student. “There are still people who are tan-crazed, but I think it’s died down a lot.”
Who is most at risk for melanoma?
Some melanomas aren’t caused by UV radiation exposure. Children 9 and younger, for instance, didn’t see a reduced rate in melanoma rates “most likely because their disease is genetic and not influenced by the sun,” Madeleine said.
But when you look at the next age groups, she said, you start to see the likely influence of the sun or of tanning.
“The melanoma rates for women are twice as high as men in that 20- to 29-year-old range,” she said. “We’re making the assumption that the reason men have lower incidence of melanoma in this group is that they’re less likely to be tanning.”
Paulson agreed that the rise was likely due to intentional sunbathing in women, but added young men are more at risk for scalp melanomas, due to shorter hairstyles and male pattern baldness.
Older men are also at high risk for the disease, possibly because they spend more time working outside.
“The message is there’s a cumulative sun exposure,” said Madeleine. “Roughly two-thirds of melanomas are caused by sun exposure in people who are susceptible. The more we can do to interrupt that in susceptible people, the more likely we are to see reductions in overall incidence in the next couple of generations.”
Prevention and new therapies
Even if you’re diagnosed with melanoma, there’s still some good news.
New immunotherapies and targeted therapies have made a big difference even in people with advanced disease, Paulson said, calling the progress “wonderful.”
“These treatments have been shown to both greatly extend survival in [people with] metastatic or stage 4 disease: The median survival is now several years,” she said. “They’ve helped prevent recurrence or relapse and increased the rate of surgical cure for stage 3 disease.”
What’s more, Paulson said “it’s never too late to start using sun-protective clothing, hats and sunscreen to reduce future melanoma risk later in life.”
All in all, the researchers are thrilled that another deadly cancer may be on the decline.
“The clinicians were excited by the data, the public health scientists were excited by the data,” said Madeleine. “We see this as a tremendous validation of the potential to reduce the risk of a very bad disease through public health messages.”
And the news might get better in days to come.
“If we keep following these younger people as they age, we may no longer see this increasing trend in melanoma with age, but in fact start to see a decrease,” she said. “That’s our hope. So stay tuned.”
Funding for this study was provided by the National Institutes of Health, the Fred Hutch Immunotherapy Integrated Research Center and the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer SITC-Merck fellowship.