home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT1936>
- <link 89TT1724>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: Special Report:Skin Cancer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 68
- Special Report: Skin Cancer
- The Dark Side of Worshiping the Sun
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Americans are flocking to the beaches by the millions this
- summer, many still blissfully unaware that if they fry now,
- they could pay later--in the form of tumors
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by Jonathan Beaty/Los Angeles and
- Rosanne Spector/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It was a hot July day in Amagansett, N.Y., and the noonday
- sun glared down at a crowded Long Island beach. Perched atop
- his observation stand, a bronzed lifeguard, hatless and clad
- only in abbreviated trunks, kept close watch on the few dozen
- waders and swimmers braving the still frigid waters of the
- Atlantic Ocean. Around him, hundreds of sunbathers sprawled on
- the sand. Some, mostly older, shielded themselves from the
- sun's fierce rays under broad-brimmed hats and umbrellas. But
- much of the crowd baked contentedly in the sunlight, wearing
- only scanty swimsuits and little or no sunscreen. At the
- water's edge, tots played in the sand, some with backs and arms
- alarmingly red.
- </p>
- <p> Across the U.S. last week, this scene was repeated as
- millions of people, still unaware of the odds against them,
- continued to play a game of solar roulette. Those odds are
- worsening at an alarming rate. The American Cancer Society
- predicts that in the U.S. this year, more than 600,000 new
- cases of skin malignancies will be diagnosed, most of them
- caused by excessive exposure to ultraviolet rays from the sun.
- Some 27,600 of those cases will be malignant melanoma, the
- deadliest type, which has been increasing 7% annually over the
- past decade and will kill 6,300 people this year. Most of the
- other skin cancers will be basal-cell and squamous-cell
- carcinomas, less lethal but still dangerous if not treated in
- time. Some 2,500 victims of these cancers (mostly squamous
- cell) will die this year, and most of the others will undergo
- surgery, generally minor but occasionally disfiguring.
- </p>
- <p> Doctors are particularly struck by the rise in melanoma
- cases. "When I went into practice 25 years ago," says Dr.
- Henriette Abel, "if I saw one melanoma a year, it was a big
- deal." This year, however, "there was a period when I saw six
- in six weeks." Her brother Dr. Robert Abel, with whom she
- shares a dermatology practice in Elizabeth, N.J., now diagnoses
- an average of one melanoma case a month.
- </p>
- <p> Experts attribute the growing onslaught of skin cancer to
- the new affluence of Americans in the years after World War II.
- That was when they began taking vacations in the Sunbelt and
- the Caribbean; adopting the sun-worshiping culture, as well as
- the music, of the Beach Boys; and jogging endlessly in skimpy
- clothes. Because the effects of sunlight on the skin are
- cumulative and usually require years of exposure before
- malignancy begins, the results are just showing up now. The
- Harvard Medical School Health Letter has neatly summarized the
- situation: "The bronzed youth of the baby boom, now reaching
- middle age, are in the vanguard of the melanoma plague."
- </p>
- <p> Greater danger may lie ahead. Some have suggested that
- depletion of the ozone layer, which blocks much of the sun's
- ultraviolet radiation, is contributing to the rise in skin
- cancer. While there is little evidence to support this notion,
- scientists agree that in the long run a diminished ozone layer
- will cause trouble. "Decreased ozone will increase numbers of
- basal- and squamous-cell carcinomas," says Dr. Stanford
- Lamberg, a Johns Hopkins dermatologist. "There is no question
- about that."
- </p>
- <p> The skin's dynamic outer layer, or epidermis, serves as the
- staging ground for all three of the major skin cancers. Both
- basal-cell and squamous-cell carcinomas arise from the most
- common skin cells, the keratinocytes, which form at the base
- of the epidermis and work their way toward the surface. Near
- the base, they are plump and are called basal cells. But as
- they move outward, they flatten to become the squamous cells
- that form the skin's tough, protective surface. Melanomas
- spring from melanocytes, cells that produce pigment.
- </p>
- <p> Epidermal cells become malignant when the DNA in their
- nuclei is altered, causing them to divide uncontrollably and
- form tumors. The transformation of DNA can be caused by
- repeated X-ray exposure, burns, infectious disease or frequent
- contact with certain chemicals. But by far the most common
- culprit is the sun's ultraviolet light. After years of exposure
- to sunlight, the damage becomes visible first as small, scaly,
- precancerous spots called keratoses, usually on middle-aged or
- older people and in areas of the skin generally not protected
- by clothing. These spots can turn malignant, becoming
- translucent basal-cell nodules that slowly expand into
- adjoining tissue.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike other cancers, basal-cell carcinomas rarely
- metastasize, or migrate to form tumors in other parts of the
- body. For that reason, many people regard these carcinomas
- lightly and unwisely put off corrective surgery. Doctors
- excising basal tumors that have gone too long without treatment
- must often remove large chunks of their patients' noses or
- ears, which then must be reconstructed surgically. Worse
- consequences can occur. "I've heard of only a few deaths due to
- basal-cell carcinomas," says Dr. Lamberg. "But if an unattended
- tumor on the head grew into the brain, for example, it could
- cause considerable damage or even death."
- </p>
- <p> Squamous-cell carcinomas also develop from keratoses on
- long-exposed areas of the skin, affecting about 100,000
- Americans each year. They take the form of red or pink warty
- growths that may scale or open in the center and ooze. Squamous
- tumors are more dangerous than basals; they grow more rapidly
- and can metastasize, sometimes with fatal results.
- </p>
- <p> But by far the most fearsome form of skin cancer is
- malignant melanoma, which sometimes emerges from an existing
- mole or simply appears in an area of previously unblemished
- skin. Melanomas are asymmetrically shaped, usually begin as
- mottled light brown or black blotches that eventually can turn
- red, white or blue in spots, become crusty and bleed. They grow
- rapidly, and once they have expanded to about the thickness of
- a dime, they have probably metastasized and become lethal.
- </p>
- <p> Here too the sun's ultraviolet radiation plays a role, but
- apparently a different one. Many melanoma victims have had
- three or more episodes of severe sunburn and blistering,
- usually as children or teenagers. Those experiences seem to set
- off a still mysterious process that results in the development
- of melanomas years later, often on parts of the body seldom
- exposed to the sun. Some evidence also exists that heredity
- plays a more important role in melanoma than in other skin
- cancers.
- </p>
- <p> In general, those most vulnerable to skin cancer are the
- light-skinned, light-eyed people of north European extraction,
- particularly those with red or blond hair and freckled skin
- that reddens and burns easily, blisters and peels. Caucasians
- with dark hair and eyes and more even pigmentation, as well as
- Hispanics and Asians, are somewhat less susceptible, and blacks
- rarely develop either carcinomas or melanomas. The rate of
- melanoma among blacks, while increasing, is only one-fiftieth
- that of whites.
- </p>
- <p> Dark pigmentation is obviously protective. The rare
- melanomas found among blacks develop almost exclusively in
- areas of lighter skin not usually exposed to the sun: palms of
- the hands, soles of the feet, under fingernails and even in the
- mouth. This leads experts to believe that melanomas among
- blacks are largely genetic.
- </p>
- <p> Geography also plays a role in skin cancer. Equatorial
- regions, where the midday sun beams down from directly
- overhead, receive the most intense ultraviolet radiation.
- Farther north or south, solar rays strike the earth at a more
- oblique angle, taking a longer passage through the atmosphere,
- where the ozone layer absorbs more of the ultraviolet light
- before it can reach the surface.
- </p>
- <p> Skin-cancer statistics vary accordingly. For example, the
- National Cancer Institute reports that from 1983 to 1987,
- Atlanta's melanoma rate averaged 11.6 per 100,000 people each
- year, while the more northerly Detroit's average was only 7.4.
- In Tucson, Ariz., which is close to Atlanta in latitude but has
- many more sunny days, the rate soars to 19, the highest in the
- U.S.
- </p>
- <p> The migration to tropical climes of people with racial
- origins in higher, less sunny latitudes has also led to rising
- rates of skin cancer. A survey of nonmelanoma skin cancers in
- Hawaii, for example, concluded that Japanese residents of the
- island of Kauai were 88 times more likely to develop a skin
- malignancy than Japanese living in Japan. And in subtropical
- Australia, which was settled largely by the fair-skinned
- English and Irish, the skin-cancer rate is the highest in the
- world. Two out of three Australians will develop at least one
- skin cancer during their lifetime.
- </p>
- <p> That remarkable statistic helps explain why Australia is a
- leader in anti-skin cancer campaigns. Each year during National
- Skin Cancer Awareness Week, literature and posters are
- distributed and dermatologists conduct free skin-cancer
- screenings. In the state of Victoria, lifeguards are used as
- role models. They sit in shaded areas, pass out skin-cancer
- literature, don hats and wear T-shirts emblazoned with the
- slogan SLIP! SLOP! SLAP!--which practically everyone Down
- Under understands to mean "Slip on a shirt. Slop on some
- sunscreen. Slap on a hat."
- </p>
- <p> Awareness of skin cancer is rising in the U.S., largely
- through the efforts of the Skin Cancer Foundation and the
- American Cancer Society, which attempt to spread the word
- through posters, pamphlets, newspaper ads and an occasional
- billboard. Hollywood may help. Some of today's most popular
- female stars, including Kim Basinger and Geena Davis, shun the
- sun, projecting a pale beauty that could influence a new
- generation. Manufacturers of sunscreens seem to have caught on.
- Store shelves these days display more screens with
- sun-protection factors of 15, 25 and 30 than with the once
- familiar 4 and 8 ratings.
- </p>
- <p> Applying a screen with an SPF of 15, for example, wards off
- reddening of the skin 15 times longer than would be the case
- without any protection. That would seem long enough, and some
- dermatologists have suggested that using higher SPFs is
- unnecessary. But Dr. Kays Kaidbey, a dermatologist at the
- University of Pennsylvania, has found that microscopic changes
- occur in the skin even when sunburn has been prevented.
- Writing in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology,
- Kaidbey reported that screens with SPFs of 30 are more
- effective than those with 15 ratings in preventing those
- changes.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the growing publicity about skin cancer and
- sunscreens, untold numbers of Americans have either missed or
- are ignoring the message and are still exposing themselves
- needlessly to the sun. A glaring example: the San Francisco Bay
- Guardian, a weekly newspaper that annually publishes a list of
- Northern California nude beaches, proudly revealed last month
- that its listing had grown from 21 beaches in 1976 to 69 this
- year. Other Americans continue to sunbathe wearing next to
- nothing. "Our society has placed an enormous value on being
- tan, equating it with health, youth, beauty and success," says
- Dr. Susan Blumenthal, chief of the National Institute of Mental
- Health's behavioral medicine program. "It will take at least
- a couple more years before we see a drastic change in societal
- attitudes about tanning."
- </p>
- <p> Probably longer. Tanning parlors are still much in vogue in
- the U.S., and many owners boast that their lamps generate
- mainly long-wave ultraviolet-A rays rather than the
- shorter-wave UVB rays that are known to cause sunburn and
- basal- and squamous-cell carcinomas. But Dr. John DiGiovanna,
- a National Cancer Institute dermatologist, insists that UVA,
- which penetrates deeper into the skin than UVB, causes cancer.
- Its role, he says, "simply hasn't been as widely recognized as
- UVB's because its intensity in solar radiation is much less than
- UVB's." He asks, "Who knows what will happen in these tanning
- booths? People have never been exposed to such high doses of
- UVA before." Dr. Laurence David, a Hermosa Beach, Calif.,
- dermatologist, is more vehement. "Tanning parlors are
- carcinogenic," he charges. "We've got to get this George
- Hamilton look out of our minds." That may be difficult. "Young
- people are continuing to use tanning parlors," says an East
- Coast dermatologist. "They are simply guaranteeing my future
- income."
- </p>
- <p> Dermatologists are busy enough today, excising keratoses and
- skin tumors by surgery, freezing them, burning them out with
- an electric needle or bombarding them with radiation or laser
- beams. Once a skin tumor has metastasized, however, modern
- medicine is still largely stymied. When a malignant melanoma
- has reached that stage, for example, the victim's survival rate
- drops to below 10%. "The best way to treat skin cancer is to
- remove the tumors before they spread," says Steven Rosenberg,
- chief of surgery at the National Cancer Institute. Conventional
- cancer treatments--surgery, chemotherapy and radiation--are largely ineffective against advanced melanoma, he says. But
- Rosenberg has had some success with a fourth, still
- unconventional treatment. He calls it "biological therapy," a
- strategy for spurring the body's immune system to attack and
- destroy the malignant cells.
- </p>
- <p> One Rosenberg technique, used in dozens of U.S. cancer
- centers, is to extract some of a patient's white blood cells
- and bathe them in interleukin-2, a hormone that stimulates
- them, turning them into lymphokine-activated killer, or LAK,
- cells. Injected back into the bloodstream along with repeated
- doses of interleukin-2, they attack any foreign cells
- (including malignant ones) with great vigor. The technique has
- caused tumors to shrink significantly in a number of advanced
- melanoma patients and has apparently even effected an occasional
- cure.
- </p>
- <p> A more advanced technique proposed by Rosenberg involves a
- human gene that orders production of a tumor-killing chemical.
- This gene would be inserted into an extracted immune cell
- called a tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte. Injected back into the
- body, the engineered TIL cells would specifically seek out and
- destroy melanoma cells.
- </p>
- <p> Still, whatever progress is made during the next few years
- in fighting skin cancer, the best therapy will remain
- prevention, especially in childhood and the teens, when most
- of the damage is done. To Americans long indoctrinated with the
- notion that a tan look is a healthy look, this means that
- instead of worshiping the sun, they had better begin respecting
- it.
- </p>
- <p>ASSAULT ON THE SKIN
- </p>
- <p>Ultraviolet A
- </p>
- <p> This long-wave length constituent of sunlight causes aging
- of the skin, tanning and sometimes sunburn. It penetrates
- deeply and may contribute to skin cancer.
- </p>
- <p>Ultraviolet B
- </p>
- <p> Abundant in sunlight, this shorter-wave radiation causes
- sunburn, premature aging and wrinkling. It is largely
- responsible for basal- and squamous-cell carcinomas, and plays
- a role in malignant melanoma.
- </p>
- <p>Melanoma
- </p>
- <p> This deadliest of skin cancers invloves melanocyte cells,
- which produce pigment. It can develop from a mole or on
- unblemished skin, grows quickly, and can metastasize.
- </p>
- <p>Basal-Cell Carcinoma
- </p>
- <p> The most common skin malignancy is usually caused by
- excessive sun exposure. It develops slowly, rarely
- metastasizes, and is nearly 100% curable if diagnosed early and
- treated properly.
- </p>
- <p>Squamous-Cell Carcinoma
- </p>
- <p> Arising from cells in the upper layer of the epidermis, this
- cancer, also caused by UV rays, is usually curable if treated
- early. It grows faster than basal-cell carcinoma and can
- metastasize.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-