- Huang, Jennifer T;
- Coughlin, Carrie C;
- Hawryluk, Elena B;
- Hook, Kristen;
- Humphrey, Stephen R;
- Kruse, Lacey;
- Lawley, Leslie;
- Al-Sayegh, Hasan;
- London, Wendy B;
- Marghoob, Ashfaq;
- Phung, Thuy L;
- Pope, Elena;
- Gerami, Pedram;
- Schmidt, Birgitta;
- Robinson, Sarah;
- Bartenstein, Diana;
- Bahrani, Eman;
- Brahmbhatt, Meera;
- Chen, Lily;
- Haddock, Ellen;
- Mansour, Danny;
- Nguyen, Julie;
- Raisanen, Tom;
- Tran, Gary;
- Travis, Kate;
- Wolner, Zachary;
- Eichenfield, Lawrence F
Objective
To identify risk factors associated with nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) occurrence and survival in children.Study design
This was a multicenter, retrospective, case-control study of patients <20 years of age diagnosed with NMSC between 1995 and 2015 from 11 academic medical centers. The primary outcome measure was frequency of cases and controls with predisposing genetic conditions and/or iatrogenic exposures, including chemotherapy, radiation, systemic immunosuppression, and voriconazole.Results
Of the 124 children with NMSC (40 with basal cell carcinoma, 90 with squamous cell carcinoma), 70% had at least 1 identifiable risk factor. Forty-four percent of the cases had a predisposing genetic condition or skin lesion, and 29% had 1 or more iatrogenic exposures of prolonged immunosuppression, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, and/or voriconazole use. Prolonged immunosuppression and voriconazole use were associated with squamous cell carcinoma occurrence (cases vs controls; 30% vs 0%, P = .0002, and 15% vs 0%, P = .03, respectively), and radiation therapy and chemotherapy were associated with basal cell carcinoma occurrence (both 20% vs 1%, P < .0001). Forty-eight percent of initial skin cancers had been present for >12 months prior to diagnosis and 49% of patients were diagnosed with ≥2 skin cancers. At last follow-up, 5% (6 of 124) of patients with NMSC died. Voriconazole exposure was noted in 7 cases and associated with worse 3-year overall survival (P = .001).Conclusions
NMSC in children and young adults is often associated with a predisposing condition or iatrogenic exposure. High-risk patients should be identified early to provide appropriate counseling and management.