The Prague Post - 'Don't use them': Tanning beds triple skin cancer risk, study finds

EUR -
AED 4.314905
AFN 76.950809
ALL 96.894649
AMD 448.484753
ANG 2.102866
AOA 1077.246113
ARS 1692.513794
AUD 1.765109
AWG 2.11455
AZN 2.001739
BAM 1.959745
BBD 2.366654
BDT 143.599084
BGN 1.958332
BHD 0.442789
BIF 3483.133528
BMD 1.17475
BND 1.517549
BOB 8.119311
BRL 6.345182
BSD 1.175061
BTN 106.264472
BWP 15.569277
BYN 3.464059
BYR 23025.098532
BZD 2.363247
CAD 1.616973
CDF 2626.741258
CHF 0.934401
CLF 0.027257
CLP 1069.293089
CNY 8.287278
CNH 8.285435
COP 4465.95281
CRC 587.780778
CUC 1.17475
CUP 31.130873
CVE 110.486954
CZK 24.280794
DJF 208.777019
DKK 7.469712
DOP 74.700063
DZD 152.496496
EGP 55.847969
ERN 17.621249
ETB 183.601633
FJD 2.668802
FKP 0.874984
GBP 0.878261
GEL 3.17636
GGP 0.874984
GHS 13.489098
GIP 0.874984
GMD 85.757162
GNF 10219.529752
GTQ 9.000118
GYD 245.833849
HKD 9.144236
HNL 30.936147
HRK 7.535086
HTG 154.019406
HUF 385.281605
IDR 19558.411503
ILS 3.785978
IMP 0.874984
INR 106.422182
IQD 1539.292245
IRR 49468.71976
ISK 148.406611
JEP 0.874984
JMD 188.138748
JOD 0.832944
JPY 182.987864
KES 151.519697
KGS 102.732332
KHR 4704.450651
KMF 493.39538
KPW 1057.270504
KRW 1734.424735
KWD 0.360285
KYD 0.979267
KZT 612.831101
LAK 25474.174418
LBP 105225.584989
LKR 363.089401
LRD 207.396634
LSL 19.82481
LTL 3.468732
LVL 0.710595
LYD 6.382822
MAD 10.810317
MDL 19.863904
MGA 5205.45711
MKD 61.625782
MMK 2467.289893
MNT 4167.28041
MOP 9.422428
MRU 47.025468
MUR 53.944961
MVR 18.103341
MWK 2037.593269
MXN 21.158045
MYR 4.817067
MZN 75.070901
NAD 19.82481
NGN 1705.925294
NIO 43.247062
NOK 11.894132
NPR 170.023556
NZD 2.023284
OMR 0.45169
PAB 1.175061
PEN 3.956164
PGK 5.065175
PHP 69.377252
PKR 329.307237
PLN 4.224237
PYG 7892.889418
QAR 4.282503
RON 5.091488
RSD 117.375184
RUB 94.048395
RWF 1710.235649
SAR 4.408189
SBD 9.668887
SCR 17.653169
SDG 706.616398
SEK 10.887741
SGD 1.516673
SHP 0.881367
SLE 28.315781
SLL 24633.916369
SOS 670.346642
SRD 45.284305
STD 24314.951639
STN 24.549316
SVC 10.281655
SYP 12990.831918
SZL 19.817811
THB 37.075541
TJS 10.798693
TMT 4.111625
TND 3.435115
TOP 2.828516
TRY 50.157362
TTD 7.974019
TWD 36.777783
TZS 2901.632708
UAH 49.649039
UGX 4176.407654
USD 1.17475
UYU 46.112634
UZS 14156.438508
VES 310.997263
VND 30902.97153
VUV 142.715862
WST 3.270441
XAF 657.277388
XAG 0.018998
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.174821
XCG 2.117754
XDR 0.816669
XOF 657.277388
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.031057
ZAR 19.809343
ZMK 10574.163237
ZMW 27.11447
ZWL 378.268997
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

'Don't use them': Tanning beds triple skin cancer risk, study finds
'Don't use them': Tanning beds triple skin cancer risk, study finds / Photo: Ben Schamisso - NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY-UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM/AFP

'Don't use them': Tanning beds triple skin cancer risk, study finds

When Heidi Tarr was a teenager, she used a tanning bed several times a week with her friends because they all wanted to glow like a celebrity.

Text size:

"It was just the thing to do -- everyone wanted that nice, dark, tan skin," the 49-year-old market researcher told AFP via video call from Chicago.

Then one day in her 30s, Tarr noticed a strange mole on her back.

It was a melanoma -- the deadliest form of skin cancer. She was lucky to have caught it early on, but has needed over a dozen biopsies to remove more moles.

Now her 15-year-old daughter Olivia is seeing trending videos on TikTok of people showing off their tan lines -- and is asking her mother how to get some.

So Tarr was inspired to get yet another skin sample removed, this time to be used in research published in the journal Science Advances on Friday.

The study found that people who use tanning beds are nearly three times more at risk of getting skin cancer.

It also marked the first time researchers have pinpointed how sunbeds cause DNA mutations in the skin that make users more susceptible to cancer.

More than 80 percent of the most common melanomas are caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, according to the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

These rays are created naturally by the Sun -- or artificially by tanning beds.

- Skin cell damage -

Pedram Gerami, a dermatologist and researcher at Northwestern University in Illinois, told AFP he started looking into this subject after an "unusually" high number of younger women came into his clinic with multiple melanomas.

The cancer was also on parts of their bodies normally "relatively protected from the sun", said the study's author.

His team compared the medical records from 3,000 people who used tanning beds to those of similarly aged people who had not.

Melanoma was diagnosed in five percent of the tanning bed users, compared to two percent of the other group, the study said.

After adjusting for a variety of factors such as age, sunburn history and family history, the researchers estimated tanning bed users were nearly 2.9 times more at risk of getting a melanoma.

Tanning bed users were also more likely to develop melanoma on parts of their body that are normally shielded from the Sun, such as the lower back and buttocks.

The researchers also sought to find out how much damage tanning beds do to the DNA of skin cells, because it can build up into cancer.

They sequenced 182 biopsies, including one from Gerami's patient Tarr.

New technology was used to specifically look at melanocytes, which are rarer skin cells that create moles -- or melanoma.

The researchers found that the melanocytes of tanning bed users had nearly twice as many mutations.

"If you're already halfway there in a lot of your skin, it doesn't take much additional damage to get to melanoma," Gerami said.

"Tanning bed users in their 30s and 40s had even more mutations than people in the general population who were in their 70s and 80s," study co-author Bishal Tandukar said in a statement.

- 'It needs to be banned' -

Melanoma killed almost 60,000 people worldwide in 2022, according to the IARC, which classifies tanning beds in its highest level of cancer risk alongside smoking and asbestos.

A few countries completely ban tanning beds, such as Australia and Brazil. In others, including the UK and France, they are prohibited for people under 18.

In the United States, it depends on the state.

"At the very minimum, it needs to be banned for minors," Gerami emphasised.

There have also been fears that young people sharing their tanning goals on social media could be driving a new generation towards sunbeds.

"For those who might be thinking about using a tanning bed -- or for parents who might be thinking of letting their teenagers use a tanning bed -- I just would extremely recommend: don't use them," Tarr said.

She recommended that people who have used the beds regularly inspect their skin and consider seeing a dermatologist for a proper check.

And if you're looking for that tanned look, try a lotion or spray tan, Tarr added.

Y.Havel--TPP