Tanning Beds as Deadly as Mustard Gas,
Arsenic
Wednesday, July 29,
2009
Associated Press
International
cancer experts have moved tanning beds and other sources of ultraviolet
radiation into the top cancer risk category, deeming them as deadly as arsenic
and mustard gas.
For
years, scientists have described tanning beds and ultraviolet radiation as
"probable carcinogens."
A new
analysis of about 20 studies concludes the risk of skin cancer jumps by 75
percent when people start using tanning beds before age 30. Experts also found
that all types of ultraviolet radiation caused worrying mutations in mice,
proof the radiation is carcinogenic. Previously, only one type of ultraviolet
radiation was thought to be lethal.
The new classification means tanning beds and other sources of
ultraviolet radiation are definite causes of cancer, alongside tobacco, the
hepatitis B virus and chimney sweeping, among others.
The
research was published online in the medical journal Lancet Oncology on
Wednesday, by experts at the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
in Lyon, the cancer arm of the World Health Organization (WHO).
"People
need to be reminded of the risks of sunbeds," said Vincent Cogliano, one
of the cancer researchers. "We hope the prevailing culture will change so
teens don't think they need to use sunbeds to get a tan."
Most
lights used in tanning beds give off mainly ultraviolet radiation, which cause
skin and eye cancer, according to the International Agency for Cancer Research.
The
classification of tanning beds as carcinogenic was disputed by Kathy Banks,
chief executive of The Sunbed Association, a European trade association of
tanning bed makers and operators.
"The
fact that is continuously ignored is that there is no proven link between the
responsible use of sunbeds and skin cancer," Banks said in a statement.
She said most users of tanning beds use them less than 20 times a year.
But as
use of tanning beds has increased among people under 30, doctors have seen a
parallel rise in the numbers of young people with skin cancer. In Britain,
melanoma, the deadliest kind of skin cancer, is now the leading cancer
diagnosed in women in their 20s. Normally, skin cancer rates are highest in
people over 75.
Previous
studies found younger people who regularly use tanning beds are eight times
more likely to get melanoma than people who have never used them. In the past,
WHO warned people younger than 18 to stay away from tanning beds.
Cogliano
cautioned that ultraviolet radiation is not healthy, whether it comes from a
tanning bed or from the sun. The American Cancer Society advises people to try
bronzing or self-tanning creams instead of tanning beds.