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Scientists learn more about rare skin cancer that killed Bob Marley

27 August 2014

Professor Richard Marais and his team in Molecular Oncology have discovered that acral melanomas – the rare type of skin cancer that caused reggae musician Bob Marley’s death – are genetically distinct from other more common types of skin cancer, according to their study published in the journal Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research.

Acral melanoma most often affects the palms of the hands, soles of the feet, nail-beds and other hairless parts of the skin. Unlike other more common types of melanoma, it’s not caused by UV damage from the sun.

The team sequenced the tumours of five patients with acral melanoma and combined this with data from three other patients. They then compared the pattern of genetic faults found in these eight tumours with that of more common types of skin cancer. This revealed that the type of DNA damage found in acral melanoma is very different from other types of skin cancer. For example, in acral melanomas, it was much more common to find large chunks of the DNA that had broken off and re-attached elsewhere, as opposed to the smaller DNA changes typically found in more common types of skin cancer.

Study leader Professor Marais, said: “Too much UV radiation from the sun or sunbeds can lead to a build-up of DNA damage that increases skin cancer risk. But acral skin cancer is different because the gene faults that drive it aren’t caused by UV damage. Pinpointing these faults is a major step towards understanding what causes this unique form of cancer, and how it can best be treated.”