Prospective study of ultraviolet radiation exposure and risk of cancer in the U.S.
Int J Cancer. 2012 Apr 26. doi: 10.1002/ijc.27619.
Lin SW, Wheeler DC, Park Y, Cahoon EK, Hollenbeck AR, Michal Freedman D, Abne CC.
Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD; Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD. lins4 at mail.nih.gov.
Ecologic studies have reported that solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure is associated with cancer, but little evidence is available from prospective studies.
We aimed to assess the association between an objective measure of ambient UVR exposure and risk of total and site-specific cancer in a large, regionally diverse cohort (450,934 white, non-Hispanic subjects (50-71 years old) in the prospective NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study) after accounting for individual-level confounding risk factors.
Estimated erythemal UVR exposure from satellite Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) data from NASA was linked to the U.S. Census Bureau 2000 census tract (centroid) of baseline residence for each subject. We used Cox proportional hazards models adjusted for multiple potential confounders to estimate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for quartiles of UVR exposure. Restricted cubic splines examined non-linear relationships.
Over 9 years of follow-up, UVR exposure was inversely associated with total cancer risk (N=75,917; highest vs. lowest quartile, HR=0.97 (0.95, 0.99), p-trend<0.001). In site-specific cancer analyses, UVR exposure was associated with
- increased melanoma risk (highest vs. lowest quartile, HR=1.22 (1.13, 1.32), p-trend<0.001) and
- decreased risk of Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (HR=0.82 (0.74, 0.92)) and
- colon (HR=0.88 (0.82, 0.96)),
- squamous cell lung (HR=0.86 (0.75, 0.98)),
- pleural (HR=0.57 (0.38, 0.84)),
- prostate (HR=0.91 (0.88, 0.95)),
- kidney (HR=0.83 (0.73, 0.94)), and
- bladder (HR=0.88 (0.81, 0.96)) cancers (all p-trend<0.05).
We also found non-linear associations for some cancer sites, including the thyroid and pancreas.
Our results add to mounting evidence for the influential role of UVR exposure on cancer.
Copyright © 2012 UICC.
PMID: 22539073
Vitamin D Council/Dr. Grant on the article
Is UV radiation exposure correlated with cancer?
Posted on May 2, 2012 by Dr William Grant
A study published online by the International Journal of Cancer on April 26 found incidence rates of 12 types of cancer inversely correlated with solar erythemal UV doses in July.
Lin SW, Wheeler DC, Park Y, Cahoon EK, Hollenbeck AR, Michal Freedman D, Abnet CC.
Prospective study of ultraviolet radiation exposure and risk of cancer in the U.S. Int J Cancer. 2012 Apr 26.
The study drew from the National Institutes of Health-AARP (NIH-AARP) cohort of 450,934 white, non-Hispanic subjects aged 50-71 years. During up to nine years of follow-up to the end of 2006, 75,917 cases of cancer were identified. The UVB index was solar erythemal UV incident at the surface in July determined from the NASA satellite instrument, Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) between 1978-1993 and 1996-2005. Erythemal UV includes the UVB region for vitamin D production, but also extends into the UVA region where no vitamin D is produced. Participants in the study were from six states California, Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania and two metropolitan regions (Atlanta and Detroit).
Those with cancer were divided into four quartiles of July erythemal UV dose with approximately equal numbers of cases. Many cancer risk-modifying factors such as BMI, physical activity, and smoking were shown to be nearly equally present among those in the four quartiles. However, the authors admitted that there could be unaccounted for confounding factors not included in the study, such as moving from the residential location at time of enrollment.
The 12 types of cancer are bladder, colon, kidney, lung, pancreas, pleura, prostate, rectal, thyroid cancer, diffuse large B-cell, T-call, and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. In addition, non-significant inverse correlations were also found for gall bladder, larynx, small intestine, and stomach cancer and follicular lymphoma. Increased risk of lip cancer (nonsignificant) and melanoma and other non-epithelial skin cancer (significant) provided support for the UV index used. These findings largely support the findings in many ecological studies. 1
Surprisingly, cancers of female organs, breast, ovary and uterus, were not inversely correlated with the UV index. A possible reason is that women spend less time in the sun than men. Other studies have found significant inverse correlations for solar UVB doses for men but not women such as an ecological study of cancer mortality rates in California in the period 1950-64.2
As the authors note, this study provides additional strong support for the role of vitamin D in reducing risk of cancer as no other factor has been proposed to explain the link between solar UVB irradiance and cancer risk reduction, and there is good support for vitamin D reducing the risk of cancer in other studies.
References
1. Grant WB. Ecological studies of the UVB–vitamin D–cancer hypothesis; review. Anticancer Res. 2012;32(1):223-36.
2. Grant WB. An ecological study of cancer mortality rates in California], 1950–64, with respect to solar UVB and smoking indices. Dermatoendocrinol., epub April 2012
3. Lin SW, Wheeler DC, Park Y, Cahoon EK, Hollenbeck AR, Michal Freedman D, Abnet CC. Prospective study of ultraviolet radiation exposure and risk of cancer in the U.S. Int J Cancer. 2012 Apr 26. doi: 10.1002/ijc.27619.
See also VitaminDWiki
- Hypothesis: Blacks get more cancer than whites due to lower levels of vitamin D – June 2012
- Cancer patients 64% less likely to die if have high level of vitamin D – Dec 2011
- Review of possible ways that vitamin D fights cancer – Jan 2012
- Overview of Cancer and Vitamin D
- All items in category Cancer and vitamin D
295 items - Mechanisms of the Anti-Cancer and Anti-Inflammatory - 2011.PDF
- Vitamin D for prevention and treatment of Cancer - technical July 2010 file
- Cancers and Vitamin D Council and Dr. Grant
- Video on how Vitamin D reduces Cancer – Feb 2011 Dr. Garland
- Vitamin D and Cancer Treatment and Prevention – presentations May 2011
- Vitamin D has a complex relationship with Cancer – meta-analysis July 2011
- China has documented that less UV results in more cancer – June 2010
- Dr. Grant on vitamin D and mortality in VitaminDWiki
- Solar UVB reduces Cancer Risk – Grant, Jan 2013
- Some childhood cancer 30% less likely in parts of California with more UVB – April 2013
Items in both categories Cancer and UV are listed here:
- 23 Cancers in the US are associated with low UVB - Grant April 2024
- Some cancer rates are reduced when live at high altitude, but other cancers increase after a few generations – March 2021
- Book: Sunlight, UV, Vitamin D and Receptor, Skin and other Cancers - Dec 2020
- More Cancer if less sun – model adding climate helps (need additional factors) – Nov 2019
- Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma 20 percent more likely if low UV – meta-analysis April 2019
- Embrace the Sun – benefits of the sun (Nitric Oxide etc.) – book June 2018
- Less intestinal cancer in mice if add vitamin D, but even less with ultraviolet light – June 2014
- Cancer incidence in 87 countries is related to food, smoking, alcohol, GDP, and UVB - Jan 2014
- 4 uses of tanning beds per year did not reduce rate of internal cancers – Oct 2013
- Some childhood cancer 30% less likely in parts of California with more UVB – April 2013
- The sun appears better at reducing incidence of some cancers than vitamin D – Dec 2012
- Solar UVB reduces Cancer Risk – Grant, Jan 2013
- A review of the evidence regarding the solar ultraviolet-B-vitamin D-cancer hypothesis - Oct 2012
- More UVB is associated with less cancer – study of 450,000 people – April 2012
- Getting little UV is associated with 15 types of Cancer – Jan 2012
- Lack of solar UVB in US is associated with some Cancers - 2006
- Use of tanning beds would reduce associated deaths by 10X – Oct 2011
- Some cancer due to low UV – Grant – April 2010
- China has documented that less UV results in more cancer – June 2010
- Grassroots PDF and video updates May and June 2010
More UVB is associated with less cancer – study of 450,000 people – April 20125218 visitors, last modified 29 Apr, 2019, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)