Loading...
Challenges in assessing the sunscreen - Melanoma Association.
Rueegg, CS ; Stenehjem, JS ; Egger, M ; Ghiasvand, R ; Cho, E ; Lund, E ; Weiderpass, E ; Green, Adèle C ; Veierod, MB
Rueegg, CS
Stenehjem, JS
Egger, M
Ghiasvand, R
Cho, E
Lund, E
Weiderpass, E
Green, Adèle C
Veierod, MB
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Whether sunscreen use affects melanoma risk has been widely studied with contradictory results. To answer this question we performed a systematic review of all published studies, accounting for sources of heterogeneity and bias. We searched for original articles investigating the sunscreen-melanoma association in humans to 28.02.2018. We then used random-effects meta-analysis to combine estimates of the association, stratified by study design. Stratified meta-analysis and meta-regression were used to identify sources of heterogeneity. We included 21'069 melanoma cases from 28 studies published 1979-2018: 23 case-control (11 hospital-based, 12 population-based), 1 ecological, 3 cohort and 1 randomized controlled trial (RCT). There was marked heterogeneity across study designs and among case-control studies but adjustment for confounding by sun exposure, sunburns and phenotype systematically moved estimates towards decreased melanoma risk amongst sunscreen users. Ever- vs. never-use of sunscreen was inversely associated with melanoma in hospital-based case-control studies (adjusted odds ratio (OR)=0.57, 95%confidence interval (CI) 0.37-0.87, pheterogeneity <0.001), the ecological study (rate ratio=0.48, 95%CI 0.35-0.66), and the RCT (hazard ratio (HR)=0.49, 95%CI 0.24-1.01). It was not associated in population-based case-control studies (OR=1.17, 95%CI 0.90-1.51, pheterogeneity <0.001) and was positively associated in the cohort studies (HR=1.27, 95%CI 1.07-1.51, pheterogeneity =0.236). The association differed by latitude (pinteraction =0.042), region (pinteraction =0.008), adjustment for naevi/freckling (pinteraction =0.035), and proportion of never-sunscreen-users (pinteraction =0·012). Evidence from observational studies on sunscreen use and melanoma risk was weak and heterogeneous, consistent with the challenges of controlling for innate confounding by indication. The only RCT showed a protective effect of sunscreen.
KEYWORDS:
Sunscreen; melanoma; meta-analysis; skin cancer; sun protection
Description
Date
2018
Publisher
Collections
Files
Loading...
From UNPAYWALL
Adobe PDF, 2.07 MB
Keywords
Type
Article
Citation
Rueegg CS, Stenehjem JS, Egger M, Ghiasvand R, Cho E, Lund E, et al. Challenges in assessing the sunscreen - Melanoma Association. Int J Cancer. 2018 Nov 16.