healthydailymail.com many facts about skin cancer we need to know:
- Each year in the US, nearly 5 million people are treated for skin cancer.61 In 2006, in the most recent study available, 3.5 million cases were diagnosed in 2.2 million people.2
- Each year there are more new cases of skin cancer than the combined incidence of cancers of the breast, prostate, lung and colon.2
- Treatment of nonmelanoma skin cancers increased by nearly 77 percent between 1992 and 2006.1
- Over the past three decades, more people have had skin cancer than all other cancers combined.3
- One in five Americans will develop skin cancer in the course of a lifetime.5
- 13 million white non-Hispanics living in the US at the beginning of 2007 had at least one nonmelanoma skin cancer, typically diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma (BCC) or squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).3
- Between 40 and 50 percent of Americans who live to age 65 will have either BCC or SCC at least once.4
- Basal cell carcinoma is the most common form of skin cancer; an estimated 2.8 million are diagnosed annually in the US. BCCs are rarely fatal, but can be highly disfiguring if allowed to grow.6
- Squamous cell carcinoma is the second most common form of skin cancer. An estimated 700,000 cases of SCC are diagnosed each year in the US.6,7, 54
- The incidence of squamous cell carcinoma has been rising, with increases up to 200 percent over the past three decades in the US.54
- Organ transplant patients are up to 250 times more likely than the general public to develop squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).58, 59
- About two percent of squamous cell carcinoma patients – between 3,900 and 8,800 people – died from the disease in the US in 2012.54
- As many as three thousand deaths from advanced basal cell carcinoma occur annually in the US.65
- Actinic keratosis is the most common precancer; it affects more than 58 million Americans.8
- Approximately 65 percent of all squamous cell carcinomas and 36 percent of all basal cell carcinomas arise in lesions that previously were diagnosed as actinic keratoses.9
- About 90 percent of nonmelanoma skin cancers are associated with exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sun
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