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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > Age Paradox: Why Middle-Aged Patients Face Higher Melanoma Spread Risk

Age Paradox: Why Middle-Aged Patients Face Higher Melanoma Spread Risk

GMJ
Last updated: 17/06/2026 00:07
By
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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1 Min Read
Scientific illustration showing age-related cancer spread patterns across different life stages
New research reveals that melanoma spreads most in middle-aged mice, not elderly ones as expected. Special immune cells that keep cancer dormant may explain this unexpected protective effect in very old age. — Photo: Angiola Harry / Pexels
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1 min read|113 words

A groundbreaking melanoma study is reshaping our understanding of cancer progression across the lifespan. Researchers discovered that cancer metastasis does not follow the expected linear increase with age. Instead, melanoma spread peaked during middle age, then surprisingly declined in very elderly subjects—contradicting decades of medical assumptions.

This counterintuitive finding suggests that aging and cancer aggressiveness have a more complex relationship than previously believed. The protective effect observed in very old age may be attributed to specialized immune cells that maintain cancer dormancy. These results could fundamentally alter treatment strategies, prompting clinicians to reconsider age-based risk assessments and tailor interventions more precisely across different age groups.

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ByProf. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD, is Editor-in-Chief of the Georgian Medical Journal and Chair of the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). He is Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at David Tvildiani Medical University, and Secretary/Treasurer of the UEMS Section of Public Health. ORCID: 0000-0001-7609-4515.

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