Burden of Skin Cancer in Older Adults From 1990 to 2021 and Modelled Projection to 2050

JAMA Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

Global Burden of Disease 2021 registry data were analyzed for adults 65+ in 204 countries to quantify skin cancer burden (1990–2021) and model projections to 2050, using age-standardized prevalence, incidence, deaths, and DALYs per 100,000.

Key findings

In 2021 there were 153,993 melanoma, 1,463,424 SCC, and 2,802,354 BCC cases; SCC had the highest age-standardized prevalence (236.91/100,000; 95% UI, 188.23–303.82), deaths (6.16/100,000; 95% UI, 5.13–6.87), and DALYs (95.50/100,000; 95% UI, 81.65–106.39), while BCC had the highest incidence (371.97/100,000; 95% UI, 310.75–439.58). Burden was higher in men, rose over time mainly from population growth, was greater in high-SDI countries, and by 2050 only keratinocyte cancer incidence/prevalence and BCC DALY rates are projected to increase.

Study limitations

Keratinocyte cancer data were relatively incomplete, and race and ethnicity were not available.

Clinical implications

Older men in high-SDI settings carry a growing skin cancer burden; intensify prevention and management for these high-risk groups. Plan resources for rising keratinocyte cancer incidence/prevalence and BCC DALY rates through 2050.