Research Article

Cutaneous Human Papillomavirus Infection and Development of Subsequent Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Skin

Table 1

Demographic and baseline characteristics of 150 cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cases.

Variable (%)

Age in years [Mean (std)]64.4 (10.20)
Gender
 Male100 (66.7)
 Female 50 (33.3)
Race
 White134 (100.0)
 Other 0 (0)
Education
grade 23 (17.4)
 >12th grade109 (82.6)
Skin color
 Fair white 59 (44.4)
 Medium white 69 (51.9)
 Light brown 5 (3.8)
Skin’s reaction to first time exposure in the sun
 A blistering sunburn 21 (16.0)
 A sunburn without blisters 58 (44.3)
 A mild sunburn that becomes a tan 35 (26.7)
 A tan with no sunburn164 (10.7)
 No change in skin color 3 (2.3)
History of blistering sunburn prior to index SCC diagnosis
 No 29 (22.3)
 Yes101 (77.7)
Skin’s reaction to repeated exposure in the sun
 Unable to tan243 (17.6)
 It can tan if you work at it 61 (46.6)
 It tans easily 47 (35.9)
Job in sun for more than 3 months at any time in life prior to the index SCC diagnosis
 No 70 (53.0)
 Yes 62 (47.0)
Number of moles on the entire body
 None 47 (35.3)
 Less than 10 moles 62 (46.6)
 10–25 moles 21 (15.8)
 More than 25 moles 3 (2.3)
History of smoking
 Never 40 (30.8)
 Ever 90 (69.2)
History of SCC
 No 8 (7.2)
 Yes103 (92.8)