North-South gradients of melanomas and non-melanomas: A role of vitamin D?
Johan Moan, 1,2; Mantas Grigalavicius,1, Zivile Baturaite, 1; Asta Juzeniene 1; and Arne Dahlback 2
1 Department of Radiation Biology; Institute for Cancer Research; oslo, Norway;
2 Department of physics; University of oslo; oslo, Norway
Incidence rates of skin cancer increase with decreasing latitude in Norway, as in many other countries with white populations. The latitudinal trends of the incidence rates of skin cancer were studied and compared with data for vitamin D-induced by UV and for vitamin D intake. The north-south gradient for CMM incidence rates on sun exposed skin is much smaller than those for BCC and SCC, and that for BCC is smaller than that for SCC. This indicates that SCC and BCC are mainly due to solar UVB, while UVA may play a significant role for CMM and a smaller role for BCC, since the north-south gradient of annual UVB fluences is larger than that of UVA fluences. However, there is an inverse latitudinal gradient of skin cancer in central Europe. This is probably due to a gradient of skin color, since white skin is an important determinant of increased risk of skin cancer. The role of vitamin D for skin cancer risk is difficult to evaluate, since serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D, as well as vitamin D intakes, are widely different from country to country. Still, epidemiological evidence indicates a role: for melanomas arising on non-sun exposed body localizations (uveal melanomas, melanomas arising in the vulva and perianal/anorectal regions) there appears to be no latitudinal gradient, or, a negative gradient, i.e., increasing rates with decreasing latitude as would be expected if UV-generated vitamin D plays a protective role. Both skin cancer risk and vitamin D photosynthesis decrease with increasing skin darkness.
Clipped from PDF
Effects of skin color and vitamin D.Persons with dark, African skin (types V-VI) have a 20-fold lower risk of getting skin cancers than white people living at the same latitude. 23
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Comments by VitaminDWiki on Skin Cancer
- Decreased chance of skin cancer if not burn the skin
- Skin which already has enough vitamin D burns much less (see reference below)
- Probably good to restock vitamin D stores BEFORE getting lots of sun.
See also VitaminDWiki
- Overview Suntan, melanoma and vitamin D
- The Protective Role of Vitamin D Signaling in Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer - Nov 2013
- Sunlight, Vitamin D and Skin Cancer – 2nd edition Aug 2013
- Vitamin D protects DNA against UV skin damage – 5 studies 2012-2013
- UVA most likely causes melanoma to progress– Sept 2011
- Sunlight Vitamin D and Skin Cancer – Jan 2013
- No – 10 minutes per day of sun-UVB is NOT enough has lots of charts
- Overview UV and vitamin D
- All items in category Skin Cancer and Vitamin D
57 items Skin cancer risk and vitamin D from sun both decrease with darker skin – March 20137499 visitors, last modified 11 Nov, 2013, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)