Sunshine May Ward Off Lymphoma
Sun exposure apparently has a protective
effect against the development non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), a
blood cancer, Australian researchers report.
Dr. Anne Kricker, of the University
of Sydney, and colleagues investigated the possibility that high
sun exposure is associated with an increased risk of NHL -- and
found the opposite -- according the results of a study published
in the International Journal of Cancer.
The team's population-based study
involved adults between the ages of 20 and 74 years. In total,
704 cases of NHL and 694 randomly selected matched controls were
enrolled.
The researchers used a questionnaire
and a telephone interview to estimate details of typical sun exposure
over as long as 6 decades. These took into account factors such
as working, non-working and vacation days.
The risk of NHL decreased with
increasing hours of sun exposure. With the highest exposes, the
odds of having NHL decreased by 35 percent compared with the lowest
exposure level.
One effect of sunlight is to stimulate
the body's production of vitamin D. The researchers say that "increasing
evidence that vitamin D may protect against cancer makes ultraviolet-mediated
synthesis of vitamin D a plausible mechanism whereby sun exposure
might protect against NHL."
SOURCE: International Journal of
Cancer, December 10, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
December 6, 2004
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