From foodconsumer.org
Benefits of Sunlight: A Bright Spot for Human Health
By M. Nathaniel Mead
Apr 1, 2008 - 12:41:48 PM
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Each
day, Apollo's fiery chariot makes its way across the sky, bringing
life-giving light to the planet. For the ancient Greeks and Romans,
Apollo was the god of medicine and healing as well as of sun and
light—but Apollo could bring sickness as well as cure. Today's
scientists have come to a similarly dichotomous recognition that
exposure to the ultraviolet radiation (UVR) in sunlight has both
beneficial and deleterious effects on human health.
Most public health messages of the past century have focused on the
hazards of too much sun exposure. UVA radiation (95–97% of the UVR that
reaches Earth's surface) penetrates deeply into the skin, where it can
contribute to skin cancer indirectly via generation of DNA-damaging
molecules such as hydroxyl and oxygen radicals. Sunburn is caused by
too much UVB radiation; this form also leads to direct DNA damage and
promotes various skin cancers. Both forms can damage collagen fibers,
destroy vitamin A in skin, accelerate aging of the skin, and increase
the risk of skin cancers. Excessive sun exposure can also cause
cataracts and diseases aggravated by UVR-induced immunosuppression such
as reactivation of some latent viruses.
However, excessive UVR exposure accounts for only
0.1% of the total global burden of disease in disability-adjusted life
years (DALYs), according to the 2006 World Health Organization (WHO)
report
The Global Burden of Disease Due to Ultraviolet Radiation.
DALYs measure how much a person's expectancy of healthy life is reduced
by premature death or disability caused by disease. Coauthor Robyn
Lucas, an epidemiologist at the National Centre for Epidemiology and
Population Health in Canberra, Australia, explains that many diseases
linked to excessive UVR exposure tend to be relatively benign—apart
from malignant melanoma—and occur in older age groups, due mainly to
the long lag between exposure and manifestation, the requirement of
cumulative exposures, or both. Therefore, when measuring by DALYs,
these diseases incur a relatively low disease burden despite their high
prevalence.
In contrast, the same WHO report noted that a
markedly larger annual disease burden of 3.3 billion DALYs worldwide
might result from very low levels of UVR exposure. This burden subsumes
major disorders of the musculoskeletal system and possibly an increased
risk of various autoimmune diseases and life-threatening cancers.
The best-known benefit of sunlight is its ability
to boost the body's vitamin D supply; most cases of vitamin D
deficiency are due to lack of outdoor sun exposure. At least 1,000
different genes governing virtually every tissue in the body are now
thought to be regulated by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3
(1,25[OH]D), the active form of the vitamin, including several involved
in calcium metabolism and neuromuscular and immune system functioning.
Although most of the health-promoting benefits of
sun exposure are thought to occur through vitamin D photosynthesis,
there may be other health benefits that have gone largely overlooked in
the debate over how much sun is needed for good health [see "Other Sun-Dependent Pathways,"
p. A165]. As for what constitutes "excessive" UVR exposure, there is no
one-size-fits-all answer, says Lucas: "'Excessive' really means
inappropriately high for your skin type under a particular level of
ambient UVR."
Vitamin D Production
Unlike other essential vitamins, which must be obtained from food,
vitamin D can be synthesized in the skin through a photosynthetic
reaction triggered by exposure to UVB radiation. The efficiency of
production depends on the number of UVB photons that penetrate the
skin, a process that can be curtailed by clothing, excess body fat,
sunscreen, and the skin pigment melanin. For most white people, a
half-hour in the summer sun in a bathing suit can initiate the release
of 50,000 IU (1.25 mg) vitamin D into the circulation within 24 hours
of exposure; this same amount of exposure yields 20,000–30,000 IU in
tanned individuals and 8,000–10,000 IU in dark-skinned people.
The initial photosynthesis produces vitamin D3,
most of which undergoes additional transformations, starting with the
production of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D), the major form of vitamin
D circulating in the bloodstream and the form that is routinely
measured to determine a person's vitamin D status. Although various
cell types within the skin can carry out this transformation locally,
the conversion takes place primarily in the liver. Another set of
transformations occurs in the kidney and other tissues, forming
1,25(OH)D. This form of the vitamin is actually a hormone, chemically
akin to the steroid hormones.
1,25(OH)D accumulates in cell nuclei of the
intestine, where it enhances calcium and phosphorus absorption,
controlling the flow of calcium into and out of bones to regulate
bone-calcium metabolism. Michael Holick, a medical professor and
director of the Bone Health Care Clinic at Boston University Medical
Center, says, "The primary physiologic function of vitamin D is to
maintain serum calcium and phosphorous levels within the normal
physiologic range to support most metabolic functions, neuromuscular
transmission, and bone mineralization."
Without sufficient vitamin D, bones will not form
properly. In children, this causes rickets, a disease characterized by
growth retardation and various skeletal deformities, including the
hallmark bowed legs. More recently, there has been a growing
appreciation for vitamin D's impact on bone health in adults. In August
2007, the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research published
Effectiveness and Safety of Vitamin D in Relation to Bone Health,
a systematic review of 167 studies that found "fair evidence" of an
association between circulating 25(OH)D concentrations and either
increased bone-mineral density or reduced falls in older people (a
result of strengthened muscles as well as strengthened bones). "Low
vitamin D levels will precipitate and exacerbate osteoporosis in both
men and women and cause the painful bone disease osteomalacia," says
Holick.
Evolution of the Great Solar Debate
In the 2002 book
Bone Loss and Osteoporosis in Past Populations: An Anthropological Perspective,
Reinhold Vieth, a nutrition professor at the University of Toronto,
writes that early primates probably acquired their relatively high
vitamin D requirements from frequent grooming and ingestion of oils
rich in vitamin D precursors that were secreted by their skin onto
their fur. The first humans evolved in equatorial Africa, where the
direct angle of sunlight delivers very strong UVR most of the year. The
gradual loss of protective fur may have created evolutionary pressure
to develop deeply pigmented skin to avoid photodegradation of
micronutrients and protect sweat glands from UVR-induced injury.
In the July 2000 issue of the
Journal of Human Evolution,
California Academy of Sciences anthropologists Nina Jablonski and
George Chaplin wrote that because dark skin requires about five to six
times more solar exposure than pale skin for equivalent vitamin D
photosynthesis, and because the intensity of UVB radiation declines
with increasing latitude, one could surmise that skin lightening was an
evolutionary adaptation that allowed for optimal survival in low-UVR
climes, assuming a traditional diet and outdoor lifestyle. Cooler
temperatures in these higher latitudes resulted in the need for more
clothing and shelter, further reducing UVR exposure. With shorter
winter days and insufficient solar radiation in the UVB wavelengths
needed to stimulate vitamin D synthesis, dietary sources such as fatty
fish became increasingly important.
Over time, clothing became the norm in higher
latitudes and then eventually a social attribute in many societies. By
the 1600s, peoples in these regions covered their whole body, even in
summertime. Many children who lived in the crowded and polluted
industrialized cities of northern Europe developed rickets. By the late
1800s, approximately 90% of all children living in industrialized
Europe and North America had some manifestations of the disease,
according to estimates based on autopsy studies of the day cited by
Holick in the August 2006
Journal of Clinical Investigation and the October 2007
American Journal of Public Health.
Doctors throughout Europe and North America began promoting whole-body
sunbathing to help prevent rickets. It was also recognized that
wintertime sunlight in the temperate zone was too feeble to prevent
rickets. For this reason, many children were exposed to UVR from a
mercury or carbon arc lamp for one hour three times a week, which
proved to be an effective preventive measure and treatment.
Around the time the solar solution to rickets
gained widespread traction in medical circles, another historic
scourge, tuberculosis (TB), was also found to respond to solar
intervention. TB patients of all ages were sent to rest in sunny
locales and generally returned in good health. Dermatology professor
Barbara A. Gilchrest of Boston University School of Medicine says that,
whereas sun exposure was shown to improve cutaneous TB, sanatorium
patients with pulmonary TB likely responded as much or more to rest and
good nutrition than to UVR. Nevertheless, a meta-analysis published in
the February 2008
International Journal of Epidemiology found that high vitamin D levels reduce the risk of active TB (i.e., TB showing clinical symptoms) by 32%.
Almost overnight, as awareness of the sun's power against rickets and
TB spread, attitudes toward sun exposure underwent a radical shift. The
suntan became valued in the Western world as a new status symbol that
signified both health and wealth, as only the affluent could afford to
vacation by the sea and play outdoor sports. Phototherapy quickly
emerged as a popular medical treatment not only for TB, but also for
rheumatic disorders, diabetes, gout, chronic ulcers, and wounds. The
"healthy tan" was in, and "sickly-looking" pale skin was out.
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Serotonin, Melatonin, and Daylight |
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As diurnal creatures, we humans are programmed to be outdoors while the
sun is shining and home in bed at night. This is why melatonin is
produced during the dark hours and stops upon optic exposure to
daylight. This pineal hormone is a key pacesetter for many of the
body's circadian rhythms. It also plays an important role in countering
infection, inflammation, cancer, and autoimmunity, according to a
review in the May 2006 issue of
Current Opinion in Investigational Drugs. Finally, melatonin suppresses UVR-induced skin damage, according to research in the July 2005 issue of
Endocrine.
When people are exposed to sunlight or very bright artificial light in
the morning, their nocturnal melatonin production occurs sooner, and
they enter into sleep more easily at night. Melatonin production also
shows a seasonal variation relative to the availability of light, with
the hormone produced for a longer period in the winter than in the
summer. The melatonin rhythm phase advancement caused by exposure to
bright morning light has been effective against insomnia, premenstrual
syndrome, and seasonal affective disorder (SAD).
The melatonin precursor, serotonin, is also
affected by exposure to daylight. Normally produced during the day,
serotonin is only converted to melatonin in darkness. Whereas high
melatonin levels correspond to long nights and short days, high
serotonin levels in the presence of melatonin reflect short nights and
long days (i.e., longer UVR exposure). Moderately high serotonin levels
result in more positive moods and a calm yet focused mental outlook.
Indeed, SAD has been linked with low serotonin levels during the day as
well as with a phase delay in nighttime melatonin production. It was
recently found that mammalian skin can produce serotonin and transform
it into melatonin, and that many types of skin cells express receptors
for both serotonin and melatonin.
With our modern-day penchant for indoor activity
and staying up well past dusk, nocturnal melatonin production is
typically far from robust. "The light we get from being outside on a
summer day can be a thousand times brighter than we're ever likely to
experience indoors," says melatonin researcher Russel J. Reiter of the
University of Texas Health Science Center. "For this reason, it's
important that people who work indoors get outside periodically, and
moreover that we all try to sleep in total darkness. This can have a
major impact on melatonin rhythms and can result in improvements in
mood, energy, and sleep quality."
For people in jobs in which sunlight exposure is
limited, full-spectrum lighting may be helpful. Sunglasses may further
limit the eyes' access to full sunlight, thereby altering melatonin
rhythms. Going shades-free in the daylight, even for just 10–15
minutes, could confer significant health benefits.
image: Getty Images
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Cancer: Cause, Protection, or Both?
The first reports of an association between sun exposure and skin
cancer began to surface in dermatology publications in the late
nineteenth century. Nevertheless, it was not until the 1930s that the
U.S. Public Health Service began issuing warnings about sun-related
health risks. People were cautioned to avoid the midday summer sun,
cover their heads in direct sunlight, and gradually increase the time
of sun exposure from an initial 5–10 minutes per day to minimize the
risk of sunburn.
In the decades that followed, the skin cancer
hazards of excessive sun exposure would be extensively studied and
mapped. Today, the three main forms of skin cancer—melanoma, basal cell
carcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma—are largely attributed to
excessive UVR exposure. Skin cancers became the most common form of
cancer worldwide, especially among groups such as white residents of
Australia and New Zealand.
When atmospheric scientists first called
attention to possible chemical destruction of the stratospheric ozone
layer in the early 1970s, one predicted consequence of the increased
UVB radiation was a rise in skin cancer rates, especially in Australia,
New Zealand, South Africa, and Latin America. To counter this threat,
the WHO, the United Nations Environment Programme, the World
Meteorological Organization, the International Agency for Research on
Cancer, and the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation
Protection established INTERSUN, the Global UV Project, with the
express goal of reducing the burden of UVR-related disease. INTERSUN
activities have included the development of an internationally
recognized UV Index to help frame sun protection messages related to
the daily intensity of UVR. [For more information on these activities,
see "WHO Ultraviolet Radiation Website," p. A157 this issue.]
Australia was among the first countries to spearhead large-scale sun
protection programs, with the Slip-Slop-Slap initiative (short for
"slip on a shirt, slop on some sunscreen, and slap on a hat")
introduced in the early 1980s. "This program and the subsequent
SunSmart campaign have been highly effective in informing Australians
of the risks and providing clear, practical instructions as to how to
avoid excessive UVR exposure," says Lucas. As a result of increased use
of hats, sunscreen, and shade, the incidence of malignant melanoma has
begun to plateau in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Northern Europe
among some age groups. However, because other UVR-induced skin cancers
typically take longer than melanoma to develop, their incidence rates
continue to rise in most developed countries. Lucas says a gradual
improvement in these rates is to be expected as well.
Whereas skin cancer is associated with too much
UVR exposure, other cancers could result from too little. Living at
higher latitudes increases the risk of dying from Hodgkin lymphoma, as
well as breast, ovarian, colon, pancreatic, prostate, and other
cancers, as compared with living at lower latitudes. A randomized
clinical trial by Joan Lappe, a medical professor at Creighton
University, and colleagues, published in the June 2007 issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, confirmed that taking 2–4 times the daily dietary reference intake of 200–600 IU vitamin D3
and calcium resulted in a 50–77% reduction in expected incidence rates
of all cancers combined over a four-year period in postmenopausal women
living in Nebraska.
Moreover, although excessive sun exposure is an
established risk factor for cutaneous malignant melanoma, continued
high sun exposure was linked with increased survival rates in patients
with early-stage melanoma in a study reported by Marianne Berwick, an
epidemiology professor at the University of New Mexico, in the February
2005
Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Holick also points out that most melanomas occur on the least
sun-exposed areas of the body, and occupational exposure to sunlight
actually reduced melanoma risk in a study reported in the June 2003
Journal of Investigative Dermatology.
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Personal
UVB dose and risk of several types of cancer both depend in part on
latitude of residence. These maps show a striking concordance between
differential UVB dose across the United States and mortality rates of
breast cancer among white women. [Click image to enlarge]
images (left to right): NASA; National Cancer Institute
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Other Health Links
Various studies have linked low 25(OH)D levels to diseases other than
cancer, raising the possibility that vitamin D insufficiency is
contributing to many major illnesses. For example, there is substantial
though not definitive evidence that high levels of vitamin D either
from diet or from UVR exposure may decrease the risk of developing
multiple sclerosis (MS). Populations at higher latitudes have a higher
incidence and prevalence of MS; a review in the December 2002 issue of
Toxicology
by epidemiology professor Anne-Louise Ponsonby and colleagues from The
Australian National University revealed that living at a latitude above
37° increased the risk of developing MS throughout life by greater than
100%.
Still to be resolved, however, is the question of
what levels of vitamin D are optimal for preventing the disease—and
whether the statistical associations reflect different gene pools
rather than different levels of 25(OH)D. (Interestingly, Holick
reported in the August 1988 issue of
TheJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism that no previtamin D3
formed when human skin was exposed to sunlight on cloudless days in
Boston, at 42.2°N, from November through February or in Edmonton, at
52°N, from October through March.)
"Scientific evidence on specific effects of
vitamin D in preventing MS or slowing its progression is not
sufficient," says Alberto Ascherio, a nutritional epidemiologist at the
Harvard School of Public Health. "Nevertheless, considering the safety
of vitamin D even in high doses, there is no clear contraindication,
and because vitamin D deficiency is very prevalent, especially among MS
patients, taking vitamin D supplements and getting moderate sun
exposure is more likely to be beneficial than not."
As with MS, there appears to be a latitudinal
gradient for type 1 diabetes, with a higher incidence at higher
latitudes. A Swedish epidemiologic study published in the December 2006
issue of
Diabetologia
found that sufficient vitamin D status in early life was associated
with a lower risk of developing type 1 diabetes. Nonobese mice of a
strain predisposed to develop type 1 diabetes showed an 80% reduced
risk of developing the disease when they received a daily dietary dose
of 1,25(OH)D, according to research published in the June 1994 issue of
the same journal. And a Finnish study published 3 November 2001 in
The Lancet
showed that children who received 2,000 IU vitamin D per day from 1
year of age on had an 80% decreased risk of developing type 1 diabetes
later in life, whereas children who were vitamin D deficient had a
fourfold increased risk. Researchers are now seeking to understand how
much UVR/vitamin D is needed to lower the risk of diabetes and whether
this is a factor only in high-risk groups.
There is also a connection with metabolic
syndrome, a cluster of conditions that increases one's risk for type 2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease. A study in the September 2006
issue of
Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology
demonstrated that in young and elderly adults, serum 25(OH)D was
inversely correlated with blood glucose concentrations and insulin
resistance. Some studies have demonstrated high prevalence of low
vitamin D levels in people with type 2 diabetes, although it is not
clear whether this is a cause of the disease or an effect of another
causative factor—for example, lower levels of physical activity (in
this case, outdoor activity in particular).
People living at higher latitudes throughout the
world are at higher risk of hypertension, and patients with
cardiovascular disease are often found to be deficient in vitamin D,
according to research by Harvard Medical School professor Thomas J.
Wang and colleagues in the 29 January 2008 issue of
Circulation.
"Although the exact mechanisms are poorly understood, it is known that
1,25(OH)D is among the most potent hormones for down-regulating the
blood pressure hormone renin in the kidneys," says Holick. "Moreover,
there is an inflammatory component to atherosclerosis, and vascular
smooth muscle cells have a vitamin D receptor and relax in the presence
of 1,25(OH)D, suggesting a multitude of mechanisms by which vitamin D
may be cardioprotective."
To determine the potential link betwen sun
exposure and the protective effect in preventing hypertension,
Rolfdieter Krause of the Free University of Berlin Department of
Natural Medicine and colleagues exposed a group of hypertensive adults
to a tanning bed that emitted full-spectrum UVR similar to summer
sunlight. Another group of hypertensive adults was exposed to a tanning
bed that emitted UVA-only radiation similar to winter sunlight. After
three months, those who used the full-spectrum tanning bed had an
average 180% increase in their 25(OH)D levels and an average 6 mm Hg
decrease in their systolic and diastolic blood pressures, bringing them
into the normal range. In constrast, the group that used the UVA-only
tanning bed showed no change in either 25(OH)D or blood pressure. These
results were published in the 29 August 1998 issue of
The Lancet.
According to Krause, who currently heads the Heliotherapy Research
Group at the Medical University of Berlin, a serum 25(OH)D level of at
least 40 ng/mL should be adequate to protect against hypertension and
other forms of cardiovascular disease (as well as cancers of the
prostate and colon).
William Grant, who directs the Sunlight,
Nutrition, and Health Research Center, a research and education
organization based in San Francisco, suspects that sun exposure and
higher 25(OH)D levels may confer protection against other illnesses
such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA), asthma, and infectious diseases.
"Vitamin D induces cathelicidin, a polypeptide that effectively combats
both bacterial and viral infections," Grant says. "This mechanism
explains much of the seasonality of such viral infections as influenza,
bronchitis, and gastroenteritis, and bacterial infections such as
tuberculosis and septicemia." For example, RA is more severe in winter,
when 25(OH)D levels tend to be lower, and is also more prevalent in the
higher latitudes. In addition, 25(OH)D levels are inversely associated
with the clinical status of RA patients, and greater intake of vitamin
D has been linked with lower RA risk, as reported in January 2004 in
Arthritis & Rheumatism.
Some reports, including an article in the October–December 2007 issue of
Acta Medica Indonesiana,
indicate that sufficient 1,25(OH)D inhibits induction of disease in RA,
collagen-induced arthritis, Lyme arthritis, autoimmune
encephalomyelitis, thyroiditis, inflammatory bowel disease, and
systemic lupus erythematosus. Nonetheless, interventional data are
lacking for most autoimmune disorders and infectious diseases, with the
exception of TB.
Other Sun-Dependent Pathways |
The sun may be best known for boosting production of vitamin D, but
there are many other UVR-mediated effects independent of this pathway.
Direct immune suppression. Exposure to both
UVA and UVB radiation can have direct immunosuppressive effects through
upregulation of cytokines (TNF-α and IL-10) and increased activity of T
regulatory cells that remove self-reactive T cells. These mechanisms
may help prevent autoimmune diseases.
Alpha melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH). Upon
exposure to sunshine, melanocytes and keratinocytes in the skin release
α-MSH, which has been implicated in immunologic tolerance and
suppression of contact hypersensitivity. α-MSH also helps limit
oxidative DNA damage resulting from UVR and increases gene repair, thus
reducing melanoma risk, as reported 15 May 2005 in
Cancer Research.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP).
Released in response to both UVA and UVB exposure, this potent
neuropeptide modulates a number of cytokines and is linked with
impaired induction of immunity and the development of immunologic
tolerance. According to a report in the September 2007 issue of
Photochemistry and Photobiology,
mast cells (which mediate hypersensitivity reactions) play a critical
role in CGRP-mediated immune suppression. This could help explain
sunlight's efficacy in treating skin disorders such as psoriasis.
Neuropeptide substance P.
Along with CGRP, this neuropeptide is released from sensory nerve
fibers in the skin following UVR exposure. This results in increased
lymphocyte proliferation and chemotaxis (chemically mediated movement)
but may also produce local immune suppression.
Endorphins. UVR increases
blood levels of natural opiates called endorphins. Melanocytes in human
skin express a fully functioning endorphin receptor system, according
to the June 2003
Journal of Investigative Dermatology, and a study published 24 November 2005 in
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology suggests that the cutaneous pigmentary system is an important stress-response element of the skin.
image: Getty Images
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How Much Is Enough?
Gilchrest points out a problem with the literature: "Everyone
recommends something different, depending on the studies with which
they are most aligned. One study reports an increased risk of prostate
cancer for men with 25(OH)D levels above 90 ng/mL, for example [in
contrast with the idea that more vitamin D is more protective against
cancer]."
Nevertheless, given the epidemiologic backdrop
described above, there are now calls to rethink sun exposure policy or
to promote vitamin D supplementation in higher-risk populations. Such
groups include pregnant or breastfeeding women (these states draw upon
a mother's own reserves of vitamin D), the elderly, and those who must
avoid the sun. Additionally, solely breastfed infants whose mothers
were vitamin D deficient during pregnancy have smaller reserves of the
nutrient and are at greater risk of developing rickets. Even in the
sun-rich environment of the Middle East, insufficient vitamin D is a
severe problem among breastfed infants of women who wear a
burqa (a traditional garment that covers the body from head to foot), as reported in the February 2003
Journal of Pediatrics.
Several recent reports indicate an increase in rickets particularly
among breastfed black infants, though white babies also are
increasingly at risk. A study in the February 2007
Journal of Nutrition
concluded that black and white pregnant women and neonates in the
northern United States are at high risk of vitamin D insufficiency,
even when mothers take prenatal vitamins (which typically provide
100–400 IU vitamin D3). Studies by Bruce Hollis, director of
pediatric nutritional sciences at the Medical University of South
Carolina, and colleagues suggest that a maternal vitamin D3 intake of 4,000 IU per day is safe and sufficient to ensure adequate vitamin D status for both mother and nursing infant.
These days, most experts define vitamin D deficiency as a serum 25(OH)D
level of less than 20 ng/mL. Holick and others assert that levels of 29
ng/mL or lower can be considered to indicate a relative insufficiency
of vitamin D. Using this scale and considering various epidemiologic
studies, an estimated 1 billion people worldwide have vitamin D
deficiency or insufficiency, says Holick, who adds, "According to
several studies, some forty to one hundred percent of the U.S. and
European elderly men and women still living in the community [that is,
not in nursing homes] are vitamin D deficient." Holick asserts that a
large number of infants, children, adolescents, and postmenopausal
women also are vitamin D insufficient. "These individuals have no
apparent skeletal or calcium metabolism abnormalities but may be at
much higher risk of developing various diseases," Holick says.
In the context of inadequate sunlight or vitamin
D insufficiency, some scientists worry that the emphasis on preventing
skin cancers tends to obscure the much larger mortality burden posed by
more life-threatening cancers such as lung, colon, and breast cancers.
Many studies have shown that cancer-related death rates decline as one
moves toward the lower latitudes (between 37°N and 37°S), and that the
levels of ambient UVR in different municipalities correlate inversely
with cancer death rates there. "As you head from north to south, you
may find perhaps two or three extra deaths [per hundred thousand
people] from skin cancer," says Vieth. "At the same time, though,
you'll find thirty or forty fewer deaths for the other major cancers.
So when you estimate the number of deaths likely to be attributable to
UV light or vitamin D, it does is not appear to be the best policy to
advise people to simply keep out of the sun just to prevent skin
cancer."
To maximize protection against cancer, Grant
recommends raising 25(OH)D levels to between 40 and 60 ng/mL. Research
such as that described in Holick's August 2006
Journal of Clinical Investigation article indicates that simply keeping the serum level above 20 ng/mL could reduce the risk of cancer by as much as 30–50%.
Cedric F. Garland, a medical professor at the University of California,
San Diego, says that maintaining a serum level of 55–60 ng/mL may
reduce the breast cancer rate in temperate regions by half, and that
incidence of many other cancers would be similarly reduced as well. He
calls this "the single most important action that could be taken by
society to reduce the incidence of cancer in North America and Europe,
beyond not smoking." Moreover, these levels could be readily achieved
by consuming no more than 2,000 IU/day of vitamin D3
at a cost of less than $20 per year and, unless there are
contraindications to sunlight exposure, spending a few minutes outdoors
(3–15 minutes for whites and 15–30 minutes for blacks) when the sun is
highest in the sky, with 40% of the skin area exposed.
Holick, Vieth, and many other experts now make a similar daily recommendation: 4,000 IU vitamin D3
without sun exposure or 2,000 IU plus 12–15 minutes of midday sun. They
say this level is quite safe except for sun-sensitive individuals or
those taking medications that increase photosensitivity.
Gilchrest says some sunlight enters the skin even
through a high-SPF sunscreen, so people can maximize their dermal
vitamin D production by spending additional time outdoors while wearing
protection. "Without the sunscreen, this same individual would be
incurring substantially more damage to her skin but not further
increasing her vitamin D level," she says.
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Research Challenges |
Growing evidence of the beneficial effects of UVR exposure has
challenged the sun-protection paradigm that has prevailed for decades.
Before a sun-exposure policy change occurs, however, we need to know if
there is enough evidence to infer a protective effect of sun exposure
against various diseases.
Only through well-designed randomized clinical trials can
cause-and-effect relationships be established. However, most
sunlight-related epidemiologic research to date has relied on
observational data that are subject to considerable bias and
confounding. Findings from observational studies are far less rigorous
and reliable than those of interventional studies. But interventional
studies would need to be very large and carried out over several
decades (since most UVR-mediated diseases occur later in life).
Moreover, it is not at all clear when, over a lifetime, sun
exposure/vitamin D is most important. So for now scientists must rely
on the results of well-conducted observational analytic studies.
In sunlight-related research, there are two main
exposures of interest: vitamin D status, which is measured by the serum
25(OH)D level; and personal UVR dose, which involves three fundamental
factors: ambient UVR (a function of latitude, altitude, atmospheric
ozone levels, pollution, and time of year), amount of skin exposed (a
function of behavioral, cultural, and clothing practices), and skin
pigmentation (with dark skin receiving a smaller effective dose to
underlying structures than light skin).
When measuring sun exposure at the individual
level, many scientists have relied on latitude or ambient UVR of
residence. But these measures are fraught with uncertainties. "While
ambient UVR varies, . . . so too do a variety of other possible
etiological factors, including diet, exposure to infectious agents,
temperature, and possibly even physical activity levels," says Robyn
Lucas, an epidemiologist at Australia's National Centre for
Epidemiology and Population Health. "Additionally, under any level of
ambient UVR, the personal UV dose may vary greatly. In short, there is
no real specificity for ambient UVR."
Researchers also assess history of time in the
sun at various ages, history of sunburns, dietary and supplemental
vitamin D intake, and other proxy measures. Nonetheless, says Lucas,
"there are drawbacks to inferring that a relationship with any proxy
for the exposure of interest is a relationship with personal UV dose or
vitamin D status." On the bright side, she adds, our ability to
accurately gauge an individual's UV dose history has been enhanced with
the use of silicone rubber casts of the back of subjects' hands. The
fine lines recorded by the cast provide an objective measure of
cumulative sun damage.
image: NASA
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Creating a Balanced Message
A
growing number of scientists are concerned that efforts to protect the
public from excessive UVR exposure may be eclipsing recent research
demonstrating the diverse health-promoting benefits of UVR exposure.
Some argue that the health benefits of UVB radiation seem to outweigh
the adverse effects, and that the risks can be minimized by carefully
managing UVR exposure (e.g., by avoiding sunburn), as well as by
increasing one's intake of dietary antioxidants and limiting dietary
fat and caloric intake. Antioxidants including polyphenols, apigenin,
curcumin, proanthocyanidins, resveratrol, and silymarin have shown
promise in laboratory studies in protecting against UVR-induced skin
cancer, perhaps through antimutagenic or immune-modulating mechanisms.
Central to the emerging debate is the issue of
how to best construct public health messages that highlight the pros
and cons of sun exposure in a balanced way. Such messages must
necessarily take into account variations in skin pigmentation between
groups and these groups' differing susceptibilities to the dangers and
benefits of sun exposure. Moreover, says Patricia Alpert, a nursing
professor at the University of Las Vegas, age matters. "The elderly
[have a] declining capacity to make vitamin D," she says. "Many
elderly, especially those living in nursing homes, are vitamin D
deficient, [even] those living in areas considered to have adequate
sunshine."
Many experts are now recommending a middle-ground
approach that focuses on modest sun exposures. Gilchrest says the
American Academy of Dermatology and most dermatologists currently
suggest sun protection in combination with vitamin D supplementation as
a means of minimizing the risk of both skin cancer and internal
cancers. Furthermore, brief, repeated exposures are more efficient at
producing vitamin D. "Longer sun exposures cause further sun damage to
skin and increase the risk of photo-aging and skin cancer, but do not
increase vitamin D production," she explains.
Lucas adds that people should use sun protection
when the UV Index is more than 3. As part of Australia's SunSmart
program, "UV Alerts" are announced in newspapers throughout the country
whenever the index is forecast to be 3 or higher. "Perhaps," she says,
"this practice should be extended to other nations as well." U.S.
residents can obtain UV Index forecasts through the EPA's SunWise
website (http://epa.gov/sunwise/uvindex.html).
In the near future, vitamin D and health guidelines regarding sun
exposure may need to be revised. But many factors not directly linked
to sun protection will also need to be taken into account. "Current
observations of widespread vitamin D insufficiency should not be
attributed only to sun protection strategies," says Lucas. "Over the
same period there is a trend to an increasingly indoor lifestyle,
associated with technological advances such as television, computers,
and video games." She says sun-safe messages remain important—possibly
more so than ever before—to protect against the potentially risky
high-dose intermittent sun exposure that people who stay indoors may be
most likely to incur.
Originally published on http://www.ehponline.org/members/2008/116-4/focus.html