Writing in the April 30 2015 online
issue of the Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine report
pancreatic cancer rates are highest in countries with the least amount of
sunlight. Low sunlight levels were due to a combination of heavy cloud cover
and high latitude.
"If you're living at a high
latitude or in a place with a lot of heavy cloud cover, you can't make vitamin
D most of the year, which results in a higher-than-normal risk of getting
pancreatic cancer," said first author Cedric F. Garland, DrPH, adjunct
professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Public Health and member of
UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.
"People who live in sunny
countries near the equator have only one-sixth of the age-adjusted incidence
rate of pancreatic cancer as those who live far from it. The importance of
sunlight deficiency strongly suggests - but does not prove - that vitamin D
deficiency may contribute to risk of pancreatic cancer."
Limited foods naturally contain
vitamin D. Fatty fish, such as salmon and tuna, are good sources; beef liver,
cheese and egg yolks provide small amounts. Vitamin D is often added as a
fortifying nutrient to milk, cereals and juices, but experts say most people
also require additional vitamin D to be produce by the body when skin is
directly exposed to sunlight. Specifically, ultraviolet B radiation. Skin
exposed to sunshine indoors through a window will not produce vitamin D. Cloudy
skies, shade and dark-colored skin also reduce vitamin D production.
The UC San Diego team, led by Garland
and Edward D. Gorham, PhD, associate professor, had previously shown that
sufficient levels of a metabolite of vitamin D in the serum, known as
25-hydroxyvitamin D was associated with substantially lower risk of breast and
colorectal cancer. The current paper is the first to implicate vitamin D
deficiency with pancreatic cancer.
Researchers studied data from 107
countries, taking into account international differences and possible
confounders, such as alcohol consumption, obesity and smoking. "While
these other factors also contribute to risk, the strong inverse association
with cloud-cover adjusted sunlight persisted even after they were accounted
for," said Garland.
UC San Diego researchers had
previously identified an association of high latitude with a higher risk of
pancreatic cancer. Garland said the new study advances that finding by showing
that an estimate of solar ultraviolet B that has been adjusted for heavy cloud
cover produces an even stronger prediction of risk of pancreatic cancer.
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