Australian scientists have discovered that the danger of melanoma is not just related to sun exposure.
New research by the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute has found that two rarer forms of melanoma have different causes to skin melanoma.
But what those causes are needs further investigation.
The two forms examined as part of the research were acral and mucosal melanoma.
They are not caused by sunlight, unlike melanoma of the skin (cutaneous melanoma), which is strongly linked to UV radiation.
Acral melanoma occurs on the palms of the hands, soles of the feet and nails, while mucosal melanoma occurs on internal surfaces including the respiratory, gastrointestinal tracts and the mouth.
John Pearson, lead of the genome informatics group and co-author of the paper Whole-Genome Landscapes of Major Melanoma Subtypes, said they now know melanoma was not just associated with skin and sun exposure.
“The way we divide melanoma up is where it occurs on the body,” Mr Pearson told ABC Radio Brisbane’s Terri Begley.
“The sort of melanoma people are used to is the skin version, but these are much rarer versions.
“They are much harder to detect and that’s why we’re paying more attention to them.
“They are only about 3 per cent of all melanomas that we see in Australia, but that means that this year we would see more than 400 people with new diagnosis.”
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Fellow researcher Professor Richard Scolyer, of the Melanoma Institute of Australia, said the study was the biggest genomic study or DNA study of melanoma to date.