Are You More Likely to Get Skin Cancer?
People with HIV are at a higher risk of being diagnosed with nonmelanoma skin cancer, which is already one of the most prevalent forms of cancer in the U.S. A 12-year Kaiser Permanente study indicates that people with HIV are twice as likely as people who are HIV-negative to contract some form of nonmelanoma skin cancer. Squamous cell carcinoma, which forms on the outermost part of the epidermis (the top layer of the skin), is related to a persons immunodeficiency and associated with lower CD4-cell counts, according to the study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The other major type of skin cancer that HIVers are more prone to is basal cell carcinoma, which grows within the deepest part of the epidermis.
More than 3.5 million new cases of nonmelanoma skin cancer are diagnosed each year, according to the journal Archives of Dermatology. While this form of cancer can be easily treated, some cases become locally invasive and medically dangerous.
Because people with HIV are living longer, says lead study author Michael J. Silverberg, Ph.D., MPH, of the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, the burden of these age-related (rather than AIDS-related) cancers will only continue to increase. Based on our studies, nonmelanoma skin cancers are by far the most common cancer this population experiences.
Among the general population, there is typically one case of squamous cell carcinoma for every four cases of basal cell carcinoma. For HIVers, though, the ratio is different, says Maryam M. Asgari, MD, MPH, a senior author on the study and an investigator at Kaiser Permanentes Division of Research. For HIV-positive subjects with low CD4 counts, she says, there was one case of squamous cell carcinoma for every two cases of basal cell carcinoma.
http://www.hivplusmag.com/wellness/2013/05/28/are-you-more-likely-get-skin-cancer