Patients treated for melanoma are more than twice as likely to develop other, unrelated cancers than the general population, a new research suggests.
A new research has found that the possibility of developing other kinds of cancer is particularly high in patients who have received treatment for melanoma.
According to the research, which was led by Queen's University Belfast, the risk was also elevated - although not as much - for patients with other forms of skin cancer.The study has been published in the British Journal of Cancer.
To reach the conclusion, researchers scrutinized data from the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry, including 1,837 patients with melanoma, the most aggressive form of skin cancer, and 20,823 patients with less aggressive forms of the disease.
Patients with non-melanoma skin cancer were up to 57 percent more likely to develop another type of cancer than people in the general population, the study found.
They were almost twice as likely to go on to develop melanoma and had an increased risk of smoking-related cancers, reports the BBC.
However, the risk of subsequent cancers was even higher in the melanoma group - more than double that of the general population.
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He said: "Sun exposure is an important risk factor for all types of skin cancers so patients who have had one type of skin cancer may be more likely to develop other types as well.
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"The increase in smoking-related cancers may be because smoking predisposes to skin cancer as well as other cancers or because people who smoke may be more likely to have generally unhealthy lifestyles including excessive sun exposure."
Source-ANI
TAN/M