Increased exposure to sunlight may decrease risk for prostate cancer through increased vitamin D activity in prostatic tissue
In the largest such study to date, a research
team from three cancer centers measured sunlight exposure in men
and found that increased exposure to sunlight may decrease the risk
of prostate cancer, according to an article in the June 15 issue
of Cancer Research.
Researchers from three American cancer centers
found that men with high sun exposure had half the risk of prostate
cancer than men with low sun exposure. Furthermore, they said in
men with certain gene variants, risk was reduced even further, by
as much as 65 percent.
“We believe that sunlight helps to reduce
the risk of prostate cancer because the body manufactures the active
form of vitamin D from exposure to sunlight,” Esther John, PhD,
lead author, said.
Previous research by the same group had shown
that the prostate uses vitamin D to promote the normal growth of
prostate cells and to inhibit the invasiveness and spread of prostate
cancer cells to other parts of the body.
“The genes involved are those that determine
the type of vitamin D receptors a person has,” said Gary Schwartz,
PhD, the senior author. “These receptors, which function with vitamin
D like a lock and key, vary in their ability to bind vitamin D and
thus to influence cell behavior.”
The researchers stressed that sunlight is
not the only source of vitamin D, and that men should not try to
reduce their risk of prostate cancer by sunbathing because that
increases the risk of sun-induced skin cancer, especially melanoma.
“If future studies continue to show reductions in prostate cancer
risk associated with sun exposure, increasing vitamin D intake from
diet and supplements may be the safest solution to achieve adequate
levels of vitamin D,” they said.
The researchers compared 450 non-Hispanic
white patients in the San Francisco Bay area who had advanced prostate
cancer with a matched control group of 455 men who did not have
prostate cancer. They defined advanced prostate cancer as cancer
that had penetrated through the prostate capsule either to the same
region of the body or spread to distant sites.
The scientists measured sun exposure by comparing
pigmentation of underarm skin, which is usually not exposed to sunlight,
with forehead pigmentation, which is, using a portable reflectometer.
Because it is hard for the sun to reach the underarm area, there
was no difference in the underarm measurement between the prostate
cancer cases and the control group. But when the forehead color
was compared to the underarm color, the control group had significantly
darker pigmentation than the cancer patients.
“Increasing darkness was associated with
a trend of decreasing risk of prostate cancer,” they said. The scientists
also obtained a sun exposure history from each participant so they
could track outdoor activity.
“Reduced risk of advanced prostate cancer
was associated with high sun exposure determined by reflectometry
and high occupational outdoor activity,” they said. "Further
studies in large populations, including non-whites, are warranted
to confirm the combined effects of sun exposure and genotype and
define the exposure period that is important in influencing prostate
cancer risk."
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