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Jury
Still Out on Cancer
Risk from Tanning Beds
Young people with fair skin who go to
tanning salons may be at increased risk of developing melanoma,
the rarest but most deadly form of skin cancer, researchers in
the UK report. However, the increased risk of melanoma seems small.
On the other hand, the researchers
say it may be too soon to measure the full effect of sunbeds,
or tanning beds, on melanoma risk since the popularity of tanning
salons has increased dramatically in recent years.
"The increase in sun exposure and
sunbed use in Caucasian populations over the last 20 years may
also have a significant effect on the melanoma risk in the years
to come, so the true impact of sunbed exposure is, as yet, uncertain,"
according to a team led by Dr. Veronique Bataille of St Thomas
Hospital in London.
The findings are published in the
European Journal of Cancer.
Many studies have detected a connection
between sun exposure and the risk of melanoma, the authors note.
But other factors besides sun exposure, such as skin type, may
also affect the risk of this type of skin cancer.
There is little doubt that fair-skinned
people who live in sunny places like Australia need to take precautions
to reduce their exposure to the sun's ultraviolet radiation, but
it is uncertain whether people living in shadier places, such
as the UK, need to be as concerned.
Bataille and colleagues compared
413 UK residents who were diagnosed with melanoma from 1989 to
1993 and 416 residents who did not have skin cancer. All participants
were interviewed about their past sun exposure and use of sunbeds.
Overall, Bataille's team did not
find a significant association between exposure to natural or
artificial ultraviolet radiation and an increased risk of melanoma.
This suggests that people in the UK are not generally exposed
to enough ultraviolet radiation to increase the risk of melanoma,
according to the report.
However, the risk of melanoma was
significantly higher in young people with fair skin who used sunbeds,
the study found. And people who had experienced 10 or more severe
sunburns were also more likely to develop melanoma.
"There are therefore reasonable
arguments to support the view that sunbed use may increase melanoma
risk and that this risk will manifest itself only in those who
have a poor ability to tan," Bataille and her co-authors conclude.
SOURCE: European Journal of Cancer,
February 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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