Medical Sciences Asked on February 8, 2021
https://skinio.com/education/basal-cell-carcinoma/ (mirror) says:
Patients diagnosed with BCC should be examined by their dermatologist at least twice a year. Remember, 50% of individuals with a history of BCC will develop another one within 5 years of diagnosis.
I wonder to what extent the age of the individual impacts this 50% statistics, since the older the individual, the more likely they are to have BCCs {1}.
Do 50% of individuals with a history of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) will develop another one within 5 years of diagnosis regardless of the age of the individual? If not, how does this number changes as their age of the individual changes? (e.g., 80% at age 70, 50% at age 60, 30% at age 50 etc.)
References:
The likelihood of developing BCC increases with age. Data indicate that BCC incidence is far higher (more than 100-fold) in persons aged 55-70 years than in those aged 20 years and younger. Patients 50-80 years of age are affected most often. The median age at diagnosis is 67 years and the mean age is 64 years.
Nevertheless, BCC can develop in teenagers and now appears frequently in fair-skinned patients aged 30-50 years. Approximately 5% to 15% of cases of BCC occur in patients aged 20- 40 years. Aggressive-growth types of BCC are more frequently noted in patients younger than 35 years than in older individuals.
The 2010 study {1} reviewed a few existing studies and seems to lean toward age as not having an impact on the recurrence rate (however, note that 1 of the reviewed studies does indicate youth+female as a risk factor of recurrence after Mohs surgery):
(NMSC = non-melanoma skin cancer, e.g. basal cell carcinoma (BCC))
Young Age Is Not a Clinical Risk Factor Although young age (typically < 40 years) is generally viewed as a clinical risk factor for aggressive NMSC behavior, after much deliberation the panel decided it is not. The published biomedical literature does not strongly support “young age,” per se, as a risk factor. Leffell et al.{46} documented an increased percentage of basal cell cancer with aggressive histologic growth patterns in young persons, but this histologic feature is already a separate risk factor in the algorithm
When the features of 54 basal cell cancers in young patients referred for Mohs surgery were compared with similar tumors in older patients,{47} tumor location, histology, and clinical morphology did not differ appreciably between the groups. In fact, initial lesion and final defect sizes were statistically smaller in the younger group. In a study from the United Kingdom in which 39 young patients with basal cell cancer were followed up for a minimum of 5 years,{48} 4 tumors were incompletely excised, 2 recurred, and 1 metastasized. Another study observed a higher number of recurrent tumors in younger women referred for Mohs surgery than in other demographic groups.{49} Finally, 2 more recent studies found no difference in either recurrence rates or presence of aggressive histologic subtypes in younger versus older patients with basal cell skin cancer.{50,51}
The panel decided that, taken together, these studies do not support the suggestion that young age alone is a high-risk factor for NMSC behavior. Any tumor showing an aggressive histologic growth pattern, regardless of patient age, becomes a high-risk tumor.
References:
Answered by Franck Dernoncourt on February 8, 2021
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