Study: Men With Skin of Color Are More Likely to Die From Melanoma

07/11/2023

The analysis involved more than 200,000 participants and is the largest study to date on racial differences in men with melanoma.

Men with melanoma – and particularly men with skin of color – are more likely to die than women with melanoma, a new study in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology shows.

"We know that men may be less likely to seek medical care than women, so they can be diagnosed with melanoma at later stages," says study co-author Ashley Wysong, MD, Founding Chair of the Department of Dermatology at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, in a news release. "However, even after accounting for later stages at diagnosis, men still have worse overall survival rates than women with melanoma, so we suspect that there are some unmeasured social, genetic, tumor-specific and potentially biological factors at play, such as hormones and the way the immune system responds to melanoma tumors."

The analysis involved more than 200,000 participants and is the largest study to date on racial differences in men with melanoma. Researchers compared melanoma diagnosis data from the National Cancer Database from 2004 until 2018 in White, Black, Asian, American Indian/Alaskan Native, and Hispanic men.

Overall survival rates in men with melanoma were highest for White men (75%), followed by American Indian/Alaskan Native (69%), Asian (68%), Hispanic (66%), and Black men (52%). White and American Indian/Alaskan Native men were more likely to develop melanoma on the trunks of their bodies, while Black, Asian and Hispanic men were more likely to develop it in their lower extremities, specifically areas that are not exposed to the sun.

The study also showed that Black, Hispanic and Asian men are more likely to have melanoma diagnosed at an advanced stage when it is more difficult to treat.

"The location of the first diagnosed melanoma can play a role in this issue," says Dr. Wysong. "Many patients have spots evaluated by dermatologists because somebody else has pointed out a spot to them. Melanoma in areas that do not have sun exposure can be more difficult for both patients and their loved ones to see, which can lead to a delayed diagnosis. In addition, melanoma in patients with darker skin tones can often be mistaken for other skin conditions, which can also delay care and definitive treatment."

Researchers are uncertain exactly why men have worse survival rates than women, underscoring the need for more research in the area, including a better understanding of social determinants of health, which are the economic and social conditions that affect peoples' health, in melanoma, and the importance of men being screened by a board-certified dermatologist.

"We hope our research can lay the foundation for future studies to determine why there's such a gap in survival rates, and to make headway to reduce these survival rate gaps," Dr. Wysong says.

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