New York: A new study has found that patients with Parkinson's disease have higher risk of developing skin cancer melanoma and vice-a-versa.


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According to researchers from Mayo Clinic, patients with Parkinson's were roughly four times more likelier to have had a history of melanoma than those without the disease.


Even, people suffering from melanoma also had a four-fold higher risk of developing Parkinson's disease.


For the study, the team examined the prevalence of melanoma in 974 patients compared with 2,922 without.


Some previous studies have suggested that a drug for Parkinson's, known as levodopa, may be implicated in malignant melanoma, but others have found an association between the two diseases regardless of levodopa treatment.


The new results, however, support an association between Parkinson's disease and melanoma, but argue against levodopa as the cause.


Researchers said, it was likelier that common environmental, genetic or immune system abnormalities underlie both conditions in patients who have both, but more study was needed to confirm that and refine screening recommendations.


Lead author Lauren Dalvin from Mayo Clinic said,"If we can pinpoint the cause of the association between Parkinson's disease and melanoma, we will be better able to counsel patients and families about their risk of developing one disease in the setting of the other."


Dalvin added,"Future research should focus on identifying common genes, immune responses and environmental exposures that may link these two diseases."


Meanwhile, patients with one of the two diseases should be monitored for the other to help achieve early diagnosis and treatment, the researchers suggested. They should be educated about the risk of developing the other illness.


The study was published in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.


(With IANS inputs)