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Vitamin
D research may have doctors prescribing sunshine
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The
Associated Press
Scientists
are excited about a vitamin again. But unlike fads that
sizzled and fizzled, the evidence this time is strong and
keeps growing.
If
it bears out, it will challenge one of medicine's most
fundamental beliefs: that people need to coat themselves
with sunscreen whenever they're in the sun. Doing that may
actually contribute to far more cancer deaths than it
prevents, some researchers think.
The vitamin is D,
nicknamed the "sunshine vitamin" because the skin
makes it from ultraviolet rays. Sunscreen blocks its
production, but dermatologists and health agencies have long
preached that such lotions are needed to prevent skin
cancer.
Now some scientists are
questioning that advice.
The reason is that
vitamin D increasingly seems important for preventing and
even treating many types of cancer. In the last three months
alone, four separate studies found it helped protect against
lymphoma and cancers of the prostate, lung and, ironically,
the skin. The strongest evidence is for colon cancer.
Many people aren't
getting enough vitamin D. It's hard to do from food and
fortified milk alone, and supplements are problematic.
So the thinking is this:
Even if too much sun leads to skin cancer, which is rarely
deadly, too little sun may be worse.
No one is suggesting
that people fry on a beach. But many scientists believe that
"safe sun" — 15 minutes or so a few times a week
without sunscreen — is not only possible but helpful to
health.
One is Dr. Edward
Giovannucci, a Harvard University professor of medicine and
nutrition who laid out his case in a keynote lecture at a
recent American Association for Cancer Research meeting in
Anaheim, Calif.
His research suggests
that vitamin D might help prevent 30 deaths for each one
caused by skin cancer.
"I would challenge
anyone to find an area or nutrient or any factor that has
such consistent anti-cancer benefits as vitamin D,"
Giovannucci told the cancer scientists. "The data are
really quite remarkable."
The talk so impressed
the American Cancer Society's chief epidemiologist, Dr.
Michael Thun, that the society is reviewing its sun
protection guidelines. "There is now intriguing
evidence that vitamin D may have a role in the prevention as
well as treatment of certain cancers," Thun said.
Even some dermatologists
may be coming around. "I find the evidence to be
mounting and increasingly compelling," said Dr. Allan
Halpern, dermatology chief at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York, who advises several cancer
groups.
The dilemma, he said, is
a lack of consensus on how much vitamin D is needed or the
best way to get it.
No source is ideal. Even
if sunshine were to be recommended, the amount needed would
depend on the season, time of day, where a person lives,
skin color and other factors. Thun and others worry that
folks might overdo it.
"People tend to go
overboard with even a hint of encouragement to get more sun
exposure," Thun said, adding that he'd prefer people
get more of the nutrient from food or pills.
But this is difficult.
Vitamin D occurs naturally in salmon, tuna and other oily
fish, and is routinely added to milk. However, diet accounts
for very little of the vitamin D circulating in blood,
Giovannucci said.
Supplements contain the
nutrient, but most use an old form — D-2 — that is far
less potent than the more desirable D-3. Multivitamins
typically contain only small amounts of D-2 and include
vitamin A, which offsets many of D's benefits.
As a result, pills might
not raise vitamin D levels much at all.
Government advisers
can't even agree on an RDA, or recommended daily allowance
for vitamin D. Instead, they say "adequate intake"
is 200 international units a day up to age 50, 400 IUs for
ages 50 to 70, and 600 IUs for people over 70.
Many scientists think
adults need 1,000 IUs a day. Giovannucci's research suggests
1,500 IUs might be needed to significantly curb cancer.
How vitamin D may do
this is still under study, but there are lots of reasons to
think it can:
_Several studies
observing large groups of people found that those with
higher vitamin D levels also had lower rates of cancer. For
some of these studies, doctors had blood samples to measure
vitamin D, making the findings particularly strong. Even so,
these studies aren't the gold standard of medical research
— a comparison over many years of a large group of people
who were given the vitamin with a large group who didn't
take it. In the past, the best research has deflated health
claims involving other nutrients, including vitamin E and
beta carotene.
_Lab and animal studies
show that vitamin D stifles abnormal cell growth, helps
cells die when they are supposed to, and curbs formation of
blood vessels that feed tumors.
_Cancer is more common
in the elderly, and the skin makes less vitamin D as people
age.
_Blacks have higher
rates of cancer than whites and more pigment in their skin,
which prevents them from making much vitamin D.
_Vitamin D gets trapped
in fat, so obese people have lower blood levels of D. They
also have higher rates of cancer.
_Diabetics, too, are
prone to cancer, and their damaged kidneys have trouble
converting vitamin D into a form the body can use.
_People in the
northeastern United States and northerly regions of the
globe like Scandinavia have higher cancer rates than those
who get more sunshine year-round.
During short winter
days, the sun's rays come in at too oblique an angle to spur
the skin
to make vitamin D. That
is why nutrition experts think vitamin D-3 supplements may
be especially helpful during winter, and for dark-skinned
people all the time.
But too much of the pill
variety can cause a dangerous buildup of calcium in the
body. The government says 2,000 IUs is the upper daily limit
for anyone over a year old.
On the other hand, D
from sunshine has no such limit. It's almost impossible to
overdose when getting it this way. However, it is possible
to get skin cancer. And this is where the dermatology
establishment and Dr. Michael Holick part company.
Thirty years ago, Holick
helped make the landmark discovery of how vitamin D works.
Until last year, he was chief of endocrinology, nutrition
and diabetes and a professor of dermatology at Boston
University. Then he published a book, "The UV
Advantage," urging people to get enough sunlight to
make vitamin D.
"I am advocating
common sense," not prolonged sunbathing or tanning
salons, Holick said.
Skin cancer is rarely
fatal, he notes. The most deadly form, melanoma, accounts
for only 7,770 of the 570,280 cancer deaths expected to
occur in the United States this year.
More than 1 million
milder forms of skin cancer will occur, and these are the
ones tied to chronic or prolonged suntanning.
Repeated sunburns —
especially in childhood and among redheads and very
fair-skinned people — have been linked to melanoma, but
there is no credible scientific evidence that moderate sun
exposure causes it, Holick contends.
"The problem has
been that the American Academy of Dermatology has been
unchallenged for 20 years," he says. "They have
brainwashed the public at every level."
The head of Holick's
department, Dr. Barbara Gilchrest, called his book an
embarrassment and stripped him of his dermatology
professorship, although he kept his other posts.
She also faulted his
industry ties. Holick said the school has received $150,000
in grants from the Indoor Tanning Association for his
research, far less than the consulting deals and grants that
other scientists routinely take from drug companies.
In fact, industry has
spent money attacking him. One such statement from the Sun
Safety Alliance, funded in part by Coppertone and drug store
chains, declared that "sunning to prevent vitamin D
deficiency is like smoking to combat anxiety."
Earlier this month, the
dermatology academy launched a "Don't Seek the
Sun" campaign calling any advice to get sun
"irresponsible." It quoted Dr. Vincent DeLeo, a
Columbia University dermatologist, as saying: "Under no
circumstances should anyone be misled into thinking that
natural sunlight or tanning beds are better sources of
vitamin D than foods or nutritional supplements."
That opinion is hardly
unanimous, though, even among dermatologists.
"The statement that
'no sun exposure is good' I don't think is correct
anymore," said Dr. Henry Lim, chairman of dermatology
at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit and an academy vice
president.
Some wonder if vitamin D
may turn out to be like another vitamin, folate. High intake
of it was once thought to be important mostly for pregnant
women, to prevent birth defects. However, since food makers
began adding extra folate to flour in 1998, heart disease,
stroke, blood pressure, colon cancer and osteoporosis have
all fallen, suggesting the general public may have been
folate-deficient after all.
With vitamin D,
"some people believe that it is a partial deficiency
that increases the cancer risk," said Hector DeLuca, a
University of Wisconsin-Madison biochemist who did landmark
studies on the nutrient.
About a dozen major
studies are under way to test vitamin D's ability to ward
off cancer, said Dr. Peter Greenwald, chief of cancer
prevention for the National Cancer Institute. Several others
are testing its potential to treat the disease. Two recent
studies reported encouraging signs in prostate and lung
cancer.
As for sunshine, experts
recommend moderation until more evidence is in hand.
"The skin can
handle it, just like the liver can handle alcohol,"
said Dr. James Leyden,
professor emeritus of
dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania, who has
consulted for sunscreen makers.
"I like to have
wine with dinner, but I don't think I should drink four
bottles a day."
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