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Shedding Light on Breast Cancer (10/23/2007)

Tags:
cancer, breasts, radiation

Women should not try to reduce their risk of breast cancer by sunbathing, researchers said.
Women should not try to reduce their risk of breast cancer by sunbathing, researchers said.
Exposure to sunlight may decrease risk of advanced breast cancer by half, according to a new study.

A research team from the Northern California Cancer Center, USC and the Wake Forest University School of Medicine has found that increased exposure to sunlight - which increases levels of vitamin D in the body - may decrease the risk of advanced breast cancer.

In a study reported online this week in the American Journal of Epidemiology, the researchers found that women with high sun exposure had half the risk of developing advanced breast cancer, which is cancer that has spread beyond the breast, compared to women with low sun exposure. The findings were observed only for women with naturally light skin color.

The study defined high sun exposure as having dark skin on the forehead, an area that is usually exposed to sunlight. The scientists used a portable reflectometer to measure skin color on the underarm, an area that is usually not directly exposed to sunlight.

Based on these measurements, the scientists classified the women as having light, medium or dark natural skin color. Researchers then compared sun exposure between women with breast cancer and those without breast cancer. Sun exposure was measured as the difference in skin color between the underarm and the forehead.

In women with naturally light skin pigmentation, the group without breast cancer had significantly more sun exposure than the group with breast cancer.

The fact that this difference occurred only in one group suggests that the effect was due to differences in vitamin D production and was not just because the women were sick and unable to go outdoors. In addition, the effect held true regardless of whether the cancer was diagnosed in the summer or in the winter.

The difference was seen only in women with advanced disease, suggesting that vitamin D may be important in slowing the growth of breast cancer cells.

"We believe that sunlight helps to reduce women's risk of breast cancer because the body manufactures the active form of vitamin D from exposure to sunlight," said Esther John, lead researcher on the study from the Northern California Cancer Center. "It is possible that these effects were observed only among light-skinned women because sun exposure produces less vitamin D among women with naturally darker pigmentation."

These new findings about breast cancer risk and sun exposure based on skin color measurements are consistent with previous research by John and colleagues that had shown that women who reported frequent sun exposure had a lower risk of developing breast cancer than women with infrequent sun exposure.

The researchers stressed that sunlight is not the only source of vitamin D, which can be obtained from multivitamins, fatty fish and fortified foods such as milk, certain cereals and fruit juices.

Women should not try to reduce their risk of breast cancer by sunbathing because of the risks of sun-induced skin cancer, they said.

"If future studies continue to show reductions in breast cancer risk associated with sun exposure, increasing vitamin D intake from diet and supplements may be the safest solution to achieve adequate levels of vitamin D," said Gary Schwartz, a co-researcher from the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

Sue Ingles, a co-researcher from the Keck School of Medicine of USC, said, "Since many risk factors for breast cancer are not modifiable, our finding that a modifiable factor, vitamin D, may reduce risk is important."

The researchers compared 1,788 breast cancer patients in the San Francisco Bay area with a matched control group of 2,129 women who did not have breast cancer. They included non-Hispanic white, Hispanic and African-American women, thus women with a wide range of natural skin color and a wide range of capacity to produce vitamin D in the body.

Skin color is an important factor that determines how much vitamin D is produced in the body after sun exposure. Dark-skinned individuals produce up to 10 times less vitamin D than light-skinned individuals for the same amount of time spent in the sun. People with darker skin also are more likely to be vitamin D deficient than people with lighter skin.

The research team included Wei Wang of the Keck School. The work was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute and the U.S. Department of Defense Medical Research Program.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Northern California Cancer Center, USC

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