Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Geographical patterns in melanoma incidence across Australia: can thickness differentials reveal the key drivers?

11

Citations

17

References

2020

Year

Abstract

Background: Australia has the highest rates of melanoma incidence in the world, but these vary across the country. It is unclear what drives the observed variation, but one potential cause could be differences in early detection. To investigate this, our study sought to determine the small-area melanoma patterns by thickness. Methods: Bayesian hierarchical models were applied to all primary invasive melanoma cases diagnosed during 2010–2014 in Australian residents aged 15+ years to model rates across 2,148 small areas based on the Australian Statistical Geography Standard framework. A multivariate spatial model which included all 4 thickness categories [thin (≤1 mm), intermediate (>1–2 mm), thick (>2 mm) and missing] was used to examine geographic patterns by thickness and correlation between thicknesses. Results: The majority (62%) of melanomas diagnosed were thin melanomas. The highest rates of melanoma diagnosis were across south-east Queensland and northern NSW, and these areas were consistently above the national average for each thickness category. In contrast, much of northern, central and western Australia tended to be below the national average diagnosis rate, and these geographical patterns were also largely consistent across all thickness categories. Conclusions: The general consistency of geographical patterns of melanoma incidence across thickness categories suggests that the overall patterns are more likely to be due to the underlying population risk profile than differences in diagnostic practices.

References

YearCitations

Page 1