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Sarah Palin, vitamin D and tanning beds, part 4:
The truth about tanning beds and melanoma.
We have discussed in this “Sarah Palin”
series, the fact that she was probably correct in installing
(with her own money) a tanning bed in the Alaska Governor’s
mansion.
We showed that melanoma risk has increased
exponentially as sunlight exposure had decreased.
We also showed that melanomas occur most
frequently on areas of the body that receive the least
sunlight. As Dr Frank Garland stated in a conference of
vitamin D Scientists in San Diego, California, “Melanoma is
a disease of indoor office workers.”[1]
He and his brother, Cedric had done
research showing that indoor workers had about a 50% greater
risk of melanoma than outdoor workers.[2]
In this blog I make the point that not all
of the research on tanning beds is bad, although you’d never
know it by the broadsides coming out of the American Academy
of Dermatology, the American Cancer Society and others who
have a very strong financial interest in hiding or refuting
any positive news about either sunlight or tanning beds.
This and the next article in the series
will discuss some of the positive research that has appeared
in medical and scientific journals and been ignored.
Several studies have investigated the
relationship of tanning-bed use to melanoma and a review of
22 investigations done from 1979 through 2002 showed that
only four indicated tanning beds increased melanoma risk;
eighteen showed no association.[3]
One that showed an increased melanoma risk
was conducted by Dr. Philippe Autier and colleagues in
Belgium in 1991.[4]
However, in 2002 Dr. Autier conducted
another study in which no association between tanning bed
use and melanoma was found.[5]
This report stated, “No result suggested a
dose-response curve, and no association was even present for
subjects who reported more than 35 hours of cumulated
tanning bed use at least 19 yrs before the interview.
Our study doesn’t support the possibility
that tanning bed use could increase melanoma risk.” Isn’t it
interesting that such reports usually die in obscurity?
I looked for other studies that might have
come to contrary conclusions and found one from 2007.[6]
It was a meta-analysis of 19 studies that
concluded tanning beds do increase the melanoma risk.
However, when Dr. William Grant assessed the meta-analysis,
he noted that the studies failed to take skin type into
consideration.[7]
He re-analyzed the data and determined:
“These results indicate that when studies largely influenced
by inclusion of people with skin phenotype 1 [light-skinned
non-tanners] without adjustment for skin phenotype are
removed from the meta-analysis, no significant relation is
found between tanning bed use and risk of CMM [cutaneous
malignant melanoma].”
There is no doubt that non-tanners,
especially if they have large numbers of moles, need to be
extremely cautious when they are exposed to ultraviolet (UV)
light, whether from sunlight or tanning beds, the reason
being that they burn so easily.
More than a few seconds of exposure can
burn this skin type. However, it appears that all other
types can benefit from moderate UV exposure.
Stay tune for more on tanning beds and
melanoma in the next chapter regarding Sarah’s tanning bed.
[1] Garland F. Address to the Grassroots
health Vitamin D conference, December 2, 2008.
[2] Garland F. et al. Occupational sunlight exposure and
melanoma in the USA Navy. Arch Environ Health 1990;
45:261-67.
[3] International Smart Tan Network 2006. Research shows no
connection between tanning and melanoma: Why this is
misunderstood.
[4] Autier, P. et al. Cutaneous malignant melanoma and
exposure to sunlamps and tanning beds: a descriptive study
in Belgium.
[5] Autier, P. et al. tanning bed use and risk of melanoma:
results from a large multicentric European study. Poster at
the XVIII International Pigment Cell conference held 9-13
September 2002 at Egmond, The Netherlands.
[6] International Agency for Research on Cancer Working
Group on artificial ultraviolet light (UV) and skin cancer.
The association of use of tanning beds with cutaneous
malignant melanoma and other skin cancer: a systematic
review. Int J Cancer 2007;120:1116-22.
[7] Grant, W. Insufficient evidence exists to link tanning
bed use to risk of melanoma for other than those with skin
phenotype 1. Sunlight, Nutrition and Health Research Center
(SUNARC). March 9, 2007. www. SUNARC.org.
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