Scientific News Health care Other illnesses and advices TANNING LAMPS MAY INCREASE RISKS OF SKIN CANCERS
TANNING LAMPS MAY
INCREASE RISKS OF SKIN CANCERS
Users of tanning lamps may have an increased
incidence of skin cancers and younger users may be at greatest risk, report Dartmouth
Medical School (DMS) researchers.
"The growing popularity of artificial
tanning (for non medical reasons) among adolescents and young adults is cause
for concern," says first author Margaret R. Karagas, PhD, a DMS
epidemiologist who is associate professor of community and family medicine and
associate director of the Center for Environmental Health Sciences at Dartmouth.
She published the findings in the Feb. 6 issue of
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute with co-authors Stephen Spencer,
MD, DMS professor of medicine and of surgery; Martin Weinstock, MD, PhD, Brown
Medical School professor of dermatology and epidemiology, and Dartmouth
researchers Virginia Stannard, RN, MEd, Leila Mott, MS, and Mary Jo Slattery,
RN, MS.
Millions of Americans visit tanning salons each
year, and the majority of users are adolescents or young adult women. Although
some studies suggest that tanning device use might contribute to the incidence
of melanoma, an aggressive form of skin cancer, results to date are not
definitive.
Few studies have looked at the association
between tanning devices and the more prevalent skin cancers: basal cell and
squamous cell carcinoma, which together are the most common malignancy in
humans. Karagas and colleagues have previously reported an increasing trend in
the incidence rates of these cancers.
"We know that ultraviolet radiation (UVR)
exposure that comes from the sun is a major cause of skin cancer. Tanning lamps
mimic sunlight and provide such an intense, concentrated dose of UVR, we would
predict that people who use these devices may get skin cancers," Karagas
said. "Also, tanning lamp users often get a burn like a sunburn, and
sunburns are linked to the risk of all three skin cancers: basal cell, squamous
cell and melanoma."
The Dartmouth study was a statewide collaboration
with dermatologists that involved almost 1,500 residents of New Hampshire
between the ages of 25 and 74. The investigators interviewed people about their
past tanning device usage, history of sun exposure, tendency for sunburn,
previous radiation treatment and smoking history. Participants included more
than 800 men and women who were newly diagnosed with the two skin cancers: 603
with basal cell carcinoma and 293 who with squamous cell carcinoma; and 540 who
were free of skin cancer.
Overall, people who reported any use of tanning
lamps were 2.5 times more likely to develop squamous cell carcinoma and 1.5
times more likely to develop basal cell carcinoma than those who did not use
tanning lamps, the team found. Other factors, including past sunburns,
sunbathing and sun exposure, did not appear to explain the excess risk of either
type of skin cancer associated with tanning lamps.
Tanning device use was most frequently reported
by women younger than 50 in the study. Moreover, the risk of basal cell and
squamous cell carcinoma increased with younger age at use (20% and 10%,
respectively, for each decade younger participants were when they began using a
tanning device).
This finding also makes sense, explains Karagas.
"Sun exposure early in life also appears to play an important role in risk
of skin cancer." The authors call for "an appropriate public health
response," particularly considering the popularity of tanning among the
young -- one prior study of high schoolers found that at least half of the girls
reported using a commercial tanning bed at least four times in the past year.
Suggestions from the public health and medical community have included
restricting tanning device use in minors and requiring written informed consent
from adults.
The use of tanning devices may contribute to the
incidence rates of basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma, the researchers
conclude. "This was an observational study that suggests what physicians
and epidemiologists expected, based on their knowledge of the relationship
between sun exposure and skin cancers," Karagas says.
She and her colleagues plan a more in depth
investigation of the effects that frequency of tanning lamp use and amounts of
ultraviolet emissions have on the incidence of skin cancer. Their work is funded
by the National Cancer Institute.
###
Contact: Hali Wickner, DMS.communications@dartmouth.edu,
603-650-1492, Dartmouth Medical School
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Dartmouth
Medical School
Publishing date: February 12, 2002
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