| Natural, environmental and lifestyle risk factors
Anyone can develop a melanoma but our chances of doing so depend on our biological nature, where we live and how we live our lives.
People with ‘fair’ skin and a tendency to freckle have a higher natural risk of melanoma.
People who live in a sunny country have a higher environmental risk of melanoma.
People who chose to sunbathe may have a higher lifestyle risk of melanoma.
We must look at the level of natural risk to judge if other family members are at increased risk of melanoma. (‘Increased risk’ when compared to people who do not have a family history of melanoma).
Our natural risk depends on our genes – the instructions that our bodies use to grow and repair themselves.
To decide the risk to family members, doctors look for signs of high-risk genes within the family.
Those signs are:
More than one case of melanoma within a family.
The more cases of melanoma the more likely there will be a high-risk gene in that family. However, more than one case might occur by chance alone or because the family live somewhere with a high environmental risk (somewhere sunny like Australia).
More than one case of melanoma in a single family member.
When a person develops more than one melanoma they may have a high-risk gene.
Melanoma occurring earlier than usual.
Most cases of melanoma are in people aged 50 or older. When melanomas develop in younger people it may be due to high-risk genes.
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