Association between statin use and reduced disease recurrence in resected cutaneous melanoma

January 18, 2024

Abstract

Background:
Pre-clinical and clinical studies propose that statins may have chemopreventive effects against cancer, suggesting their possible roles as adjunctive therapies for melanoma.

Objective:
To investigate the association between regular statin use and disease recurrence in patients with resected Stage I-III melanoma.

Methods:
We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients enrolled in the multi-centre Melanoma Research Victoria cohort with a histologically confirmed, resected American Joint Committee on Cancer Stage I-III cutaneous melanoma. Patients with uveal melanoma, melanoma of unknown primary site, or mucosal melanoma were excluded. Melanoma recurrence outcomes were compared between statin users and statin non-users, with statin use determined by linkage to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (Australia) prescription database.

Results:
624 patients with resected Stage I-III melanoma at diagnosis were eligible for the study. 193 patients were classified as statin users and 431 patients as statin non-users. In all, 45 statin users experienced disease recurrence compared to 140 (23.3 vs 32.5%, p=0.05) statin non-users with similar durations of follow-up (median 2.2 and 2.4 years, respectively). After adjustment, statin users had a lower risk melanoma recurrence than statin non-users (HR 0.66, 95%CI 0.44–0.99, p=0.04). A lower risk of recurrence was also observed in subset analyses of statin users on high-dose therapy (HR 0.50, 95%CI 0.25–0.99, p=0.05) and patients who were adherent to statin therapy (HR 0.60, 95%CI 0.39–0.92, p=0.02).

Conclusion:
Our study supports the possibility that an association exists between statin use and reduced disease recurrence in resected cutaneous melanoma.

Source:

Charlie Yue Wang, Mark Shackleton, Sonia Mailer, Grant A. McArthur, Sophia Zoungas, Rory Wolfe, Victoria J Mar, Statin use in high-risk resected, cutaneous malignant melanoma: a multi-centre retrospective cohort study, EJC Skin Cancer, 2024, 100017, ISSN 2772-6118, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejcskn.2024.100017.

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