Climate Change, Cutaneous Ageing, and Skin Cancer: Mechanistic Pathways, Epidemiological Evidence, and Public Health Implications

Autori

  • Carmen Cantisani
  • Ardeshir Bayat

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15168/2284-4503-3906

Parole chiave:

climate change, cutaneous ageing, public health, skin cancer, ultraviolet radiation

Abstract

Climate change is transforming the environmental exposures that shape human skin health. Rising ultraviolet (UV) radiation, heat extremes, humidity fluctuations, and escalating air pollution form a shifting cutaneous exposome. Together, these stressors accelerate extrinsic skin ageing and increase the burden of skin cancer. At the mechanistic level, pathways include oxidative stress, extracellular matrix degradation, mitochondrial dysfunction, immunosuppression, and pollutant– UV synergy. Epidemiological evidence supports growing risks across populations, though data gaps remain. Particularly vulnerable groups include outdoor workers, climate migrants, children, the elderly, and immunocompromised patients. This article synthesizes current knowledge, identifies mechanistic and epidemiological links, and emphasizes prevention, from personal photoprotection to systemic climate adaptation. Situating dermatology within planetary health underscores the urgency of integrating skin health into climate policy and research priorities.

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Pubblicato

2026-01-30

Come citare

1.
Cantisani C, Bayat A. Climate Change, Cutaneous Ageing, and Skin Cancer: Mechanistic Pathways, Epidemiological Evidence, and Public Health Implications. BioLaw [Internet]. 30 gennaio 2026 [citato 6 febbraio 2026];(3S):169-81. Disponibile su: https://teseo.unitn.it/biolaw/article/view/3906

Fascicolo

Sezione

III. Innovazione scientifica, etica e trasformazione digitale in sanità. Approcci traslazionali e medicina integrata per una salute sostenibile