Use
of tanning salons significantly increases skin cancer risk
09:24 PM PDT
on Tuesday, October 14, 2003 Associated
Press
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Regularly baking
to a golden tan under sun lamps can increase the risk of malignant
melanoma, a sometimes fatal skin cancer, and the younger a woman
starts the greater the risk, a study says.
The study, which analyzed the
lifestyles and melanoma risks for women between the ages of 30 and
50, found what the researchers said was the strongest evidence yet
that artificial sun tanning can be dangerous to healthy skin.
Melanoma risk is highest among
fair-skinned people in Australia, New Zealand, Europe and North
America. Since the 1950s, the rate of the skin cancer has tripled in
Norway and Sweden, where light skin is common. About 50,000 cases of
melanoma are diagnosed annually in the United States and about 7,500
people die of the disease each year, according to American Academy
of Dermatology officials.
In the study, appearing this week in
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, an international group
of researchers analyzed data from the Women's Lifestyle and Health
Cohort Study in Norway and Sweden.
In 1991 and 1992, 106,379 women
completed extensive questionnaires about their exposure to sunlight
and to artificial tanning. In 1999, the researchers rechecked the
women's cancer status using the national health registries in Norway
and Sweden.
The researchers found 187 cases of
malignant melanoma diagnosed among the study group during the
eight-year follow-up period.
They found that women of any age or
hair color who regularly visited tanning salons once or more per
month increased their chance of developing melanoma by 55 percent.
The risk was highest for young
adults. Compared with women who never used a solarium, women who
reported using artificial tanning systems once or more per month
when they were between the ages of 20 and 29 increased their risk of
melanoma by about 150 percent.
"Our results provide stronger
evidence than those of other studies that solarium use is associated
with an increased risk of melanoma," the authors of the study
wrote.
"This is just one of many papers
that have suggested a link between indoor tanning and the
development of melanoma skin cancer," said Dr. James M.
Spencer, vice chairman of dermatology at the Mt. Sinai School of
Medicine in New York. He said studies have also linked artificial
tanning to basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma, two common types
of skin cancer.
Spencer said it is well known that
ultraviolet light causes skin cancer.
"Whether you get it at the
indoor tanning parlor or at the beach, (UV light) is a
carcinogen," he said.
People may have good reasons to work
and play in natural sunlight, where they can protect themselves with
sun block, Spencer acknowledged. However, "There is no
compelling reason to go to a tanning salon," he said. "It
is just for a cosmetic tan that fades in a couple of weeks and can
cause you a lifetime of trouble."
Melanoma is virtually 100 percent
curable as long as it is limited to the skin. If allowed to grow,
though, the cancer can penetrate to blood vessels and the lymphatic
system and then spread rapidly throughout the body.
"If it spreads to the lymph
nodes or to the internal organs, it is time to put your affairs in
order," said Spencer. "Once it is spread, there's nothing
to do. There are treatments that might buy some time, but that
doesn't cure anybody."
The incidence of melanoma has
increased rapidly in the last half century, and Spencer, an official
with the American Academy of Dermatology, said about 50,000
Americans will be diagnosed with it this year.
In the study, researchers also found
that the risk of melanoma from sun exposure was about twice as high
for blondes than for women with dark brown or black hair. For
red-haired women, the risk was about four times as high, the
researchers said.
The presence of irregularly shaped
moles, called nevi, also increases the risk of melanoma cancer, the
study found. Women with a single nevus on the leg were about twice
as likely to develop the disease. With more than seven nevi, the
risk went up about 300 percent, the researchers report.
Nevi are moles that arise from the
pigment-producing cells of the skin. Those considered of most
concern for cancer are asymmetrical in shape with ragged edges, have
different shades of color and are larger than about a quarter-inch.