18. Epidemiology and prevention of head and neck cancers and skin cancers
Head and neck
- Epidemiology
- Explosive growth in incidence of head and neck tumors in 20th century
- Accounts for 3% of cancers in Western world
- Male > female
- Etiology
- Smoking
- High alcohol intake
- “Smokeless” tobacco
- Poor oral hygiene
- Oral infections
- HPV 16, 18
- Prognosis
- Death rate 4x increase in last 30 years in hungary
- 5-year survival 20%
- Prevention
- Stop smoking
- Improve oral hygiene
- HPV vaccination
Non-melanoma skin cancer
- Epidemiology
- Non-melanoma incidence increasing
- Male > female
- More common than melanoma
- Highest incidence in Australia, US, Europe
- Lowest in dark-skinned populations
- Etiology
- Sun exposure
- Tanning beds
- Skin types I and II
- Light skin
- Blue eyes
- Blond hair
- Easily sunburnt
- Arsenic exposure
- Prognosis
- 5-year survival almost 100%
- Prevention
- Sunscreen
- Clothes in the sun
- Don’t do tanning beds
Melanoma
- Epidemiology
- Only 2% of cancer incidence
- Etiology
- Sun exposure
- Especially sunburn in childhood
- Tanning bed
- Congenital nevi
- Skin types I and II
- Light skin
- Blue eyes
- Blond hair
- Easily sunburnt
- Sun exposure
- Prognosis
- Vary variable depending on stage at diagnosis
- 5-year survival
- T1 > 90%
- N1, M0 20 – 40%
- M1 < 5%
- Prevention
- Sunscreen
- Clothes in the sun
- Don’t do tanning beds