Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Skin Cancer Campaign Targets Vanity

By Jessica Marszalek13mar07

YOUNG women who ignore health warnings about skin cancer may be coaxed out of the sun by a new campaign appealing to their vanity.

Visiting academic Dr Kristina Jackson today presented US research into reshaping attitudes on sun protection and discouraging sun tanning at a Brisbane medical conference hosted by the Queensland Cancer Fund and Queensland University of Technology.

Dr Jackson discussed her intervention method in which a group of young women were shown a video that promoted the beauty of pale skin, and the effects of skin cancer.

A follow-up four months later showed the women had reduced the time they spent sunbathing and took more precautions.

Queensland Cancer Fund SunSmart coordinator Lisa Naumann said Dr Jackson's research, which focused on the beauty benefits of avoiding the sun, would be looked at to see how it could be used to target young women in Australia.

She said young women often missed messages which drove home the possibility of developing skin cancer and it was hoped a different slant, showing the negative effects of sun exposure such as wrinkles, would be more effective.

She said measures such as photo-ageing had been used to drive home the message.

"(It was) not so much scare tactics but just saying this is the reality of it," Ms Naumann said.
"Just by showing them the damaging effects of the sun, it had a positive influence."

She said an advertising campaign could be used to encourage young women to "enjoy the skin they're in".

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Cancer-Fighting Gene Guards Against Sun Damage

Cancer-Fighting Gene Guards Against Sun Damage

THURSDAY, March 8 (HealthDay News) -- A gene that is known to play a key role in suppressing cancer also seems to protect against sun damage while promoting a golden tan.
The revelation could one day lead to better ways to prevent skin cancer, which roughly 1 million Americans develop each year.

"This finding provides us an opportunity to look at human populations with a varied risk of developing skin cancer and start to identify precisely what is regulating the risk of developing skin cancer rather than estimating," said senior study author Dr. David Fisher, director of the melanoma program at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at Harvard Medical School. "Right now, we're incredibly inaccurate in identifying risk and, therefore, in ameliorating risk."
The findings are published in the March 9 issue of Cell.

People who tan easily or have darker skin are much less likely to develop melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.

"The tanning response is a protective response to injury, which can prevent further injury," explained Dr. Robin Ashinoff, medical director of Dermatologic, Mohs and Laser Surgery at Hackensack University Medical Center, in New Jersey. "On the one hand, the skin is the most common organ to be affected by cancer and, in principle, it ought to be preventable because we know the carcinogen which causes it, the sun."Still, rates of skin cancer remain high.

"That's a terrible state of affairs in 2007," Fisher said. "We really want to understand the impact of ultraviolet radiation on the skin and what is the molecular cascade that is occurring downstream."

Six months ago, Fisher and his team published a paper documenting the fact that keratinocytes -- cells closer to the surface of the skin -- react to sun exposure. Previously, it had been thought that pigment-producing melanocytes played this role.

Once keratinocytes are exposed to rays from the sun, they produce melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH), a growth factor which binds to the pigment cells (melanocytes) and stimulates them to produce pigment.

Differences in the MSH receptor explain differences in ability to tan. Redheads, for example, have a variant which doesn't respond at all to MSH, explaining why the Nicole Kidmans of this world don't turn a tawny bronze.

Fisher and his colleagues still didn't know, however, what happened within keratinocytes to stimulate MSH production.

"We knew that ultraviolet radiation causes MSH to be induced," Fisher said. "How is the ultraviolet radiation doing that? What is perceiving the radiation and translating that signaling into making more MSH?"

The key happens to be the tumor-suppressor gene known as p53, which is induced in almost every keratinocyte of human skin samples within an hour of being exposed to the sun's ultraviolet rays. "That activity is completely regulated by this protein," Fisher said.
The finding is biologically plausible, experts said.

"It makes sense that most skin cancers and cancers, for that matter, have mutations in the p53 because it functions to protect us. It basically causes abnormal cells to be killed or die, and regulates all sorts of pathways that protect us," Ashinoff said. "It's not surprising that something that would protect us would also stimulate mechanisms in the skin known for protecting us."
"Knowing this, we can now identify exactly where we would like to interfere with the risk," Fisher added. "Knowing that p53 is part of this process allows us to potentially identify drugs that might be able to restore this response at different steps, depending on where the person might need it, where their block is."

By Amanda GardnerHealthDay ReporterThursday, March 8, 2007; 12:00 AM

Friday, March 02, 2007

Maggy!


Its been a testing year for Magnus Backstedt the Liquigas rider who crashed on the opening day of his season in 2006 and suffered a career threatening knee injury, but Backstedt has now revealed a more sinister problem that he has also had to deal with alongside everything else. "I visited the doctor in December because of a mole that I didn't like the look of. He removed it anyway and said it was probably nothing to worry about.

Then in January I received the news that it was a malignant melanoma, skin cancer! I then had to have another operation where they took a piece of skin 9cm by 5 cm from my chest. As you can imagine I am now quite a beauty with my shirt off" He joked " We as bike riders whether you are a pro or otherwise, spend a lot of time in the sun. I have got the all clear, but I am now going to look at raising awareness of the risks of skin cancer. I am though ready to get back and put all this behind me. I am so fired up to get back to my best" He concluded.