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A reversal in the long-term increase in deaths attributable to malignant melanoma.
Authors:G C Roush  L McKay  T R Holford
Affiliation:Institute of Environmental Medicine, New York University Medical Center, NY.
Abstract:For a few years in the 1980s, United States mortality rates suggested a plateau in the long-term increase for malignant melanoma. However, temporary plateaus in the increase of the age-adjusted rate by year of death have occurred in previous decades, only to be followed by a continued upward increase, with a long-term rise of about 2% per year. To determine whether a cessation in the long-term increase might be in progress, death rates were analyzed by year of birth, age at death, and year of death: (1) the long-term patterns of change are best described by birth cohort rather than by time period of death, indicating that analyses by a year of birth are key to a better understanding of the long-term trends; (2) in both men and women, evidence for a change in slope begins among those born in the early 1930s; (3) the decline in the rates begins among women born since the early 1930s and among men born since the early 1950s: the slope for men is -0.2661 (95% confidence limits [CL] = -0.380 to -0.152), and, for women, the slope is -0.02354 (95% CL = -0.041 to -0.005); (4) long-term Connecticut and US mortality trends were similar in pattern and direction, and long-term Connecticut incidence rates showed a persistent increase through the 1955 to 1965 birth cohorts. These analyses suggest a persistent cessation in the long-term increase and a downward trend in death rates from this cancer.
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