The Stockholm-Gotland Cancer Register was used to evaluate the clinica
l observation that patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) had an i
ncreased risk of malignant melanoma or squamous-cell carcinoma of the
skin (SCCS) and vice verse. During 1958-1992, NHL was diagnosed in a t
otal of 6,176 patients. Of these patients, 504 developed a second prim
ary cancer of any type except NHL, compared to 301.9 expected, giving
a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 1.7 [95% confidence interval (
Cl) 1.5-1.8]. The risk of SCCS and malignant melanoma in patients with
NHL was 4.8 (95% Cl 3.6-6.2; n = 54) and 1.7 (95% Cl 0.8-3.1; n = 10)
, respectively. The hazard risk for a second malignancy was relatively
constant over time, whereas the skin malignancies revealed the highes
t risks 3-10 years after initial diagnosis. Similarly, the risk of a s
econdary NHL was studied in patients with malignant melanoma and SCCS
during the same period and found to be 1.3 (95% Cl 0.8-2.1;n = 17) and
1.8 (95% CI 1.2-2.5; n = 34), respectively. The highest risk for NHL
following malignant melanoma was seen 3-10 years after first diagnosis
, while the highest risk following SCCS was observed 0-2 years after i
nitial diagnosis. One of several possible explanations for the develop
ment of NHL and a skin malignancy in the same patient is an immunologi
cal defect caused by sun exposure. (C) 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.