A person with skin cancer in Australia is most likely to be a man aged over 55 years from Queensland, new research shows.

Older men, particularly those from Australia's sunshine state, account for the vast majority of non-melanoma skin cancers diagnosed in Australia.

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Researchers at QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute have for the first time measured the rates of keratinocyte cancers (non-melanoma) of the skin among the adult population.

Analysis of Medicare data, published in the Medical Journal of Australia, found around one in 14 adults over 20 had at least one non-melanoma cancer removed between 2011 and 2014, and almost half of those had more than one cut out.

The burden of skin cancer was greatest in sunnier areas, with Queensland men over 55 at highest risk. Rates in Queensland were nearly twice the national average and almost three-fold higher than Victoria and Tasmania.
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In total, more than 183,000 skin cancers were removed over the four years.

Basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) and squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) cause more than 95,000 hospital admissions each year in Australia and account for more than 500 deaths.

Significantly, the analysis found that 74 per cent of all skin cancers that were removed came from just 47 per cent of Australians who had skin cancer treatment.

In other words, the vast majority of skin cancers arose in a relatively small pool of people.

"They're typically older males; men over the age of 70 if they get one skin cancer they are really likely to get more," Professor Whiteman told AAP.

"Our results show that by the age of 70 years, around half of all Australian men treated for skin cancer will have another excision within four years."

While not commonly fatal, these common forms of skin cancers are "hugely" costly, says Professor David Whiteman, QIMR Berghofer Cancer Control Group leader.

"These kinds of skin cancers are caused by chronic long-term sun damage and so the people who are getting them are usually in the 50s, 60s and 70s and the rates go up almost 10-fold with age, they rapidly rise with age," Professor Whiteman said.

"So what you are seeing in the people who are currently in their 70s is the result of sun exposure they had 30, 40 and 50 years ago."

Professor Whiteman says the research shows the need for greater surveillance of this group of skin cancer patients.

"Because the likelihood is that they'll have more in the next couple of years and the sooner you can treat them the less the damage the patient incurs and the less likelihood there is a spread of the cancer."

Heather Walker - Chair of the Skin Cancer Committee at Cancer Council Australia - says the message is clear; sun protection is just as important as ever.

"Use sun protection, keep an eye on your skin and go to the doctor if you notice anything unusual," said Ms Walker.

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