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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Biology
Medicine
Sunlight, PCB exposure
enhance skin cancer chances
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
3/21/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Sunlight
and PCB exposure can hit you where you least expect it. The combination
enhances the development of non-melanoma skin cancer on parts of the
body not directly exposed to the sun, according to a University of Illinois
study.
Preliminary results of the research, which used the hairless mouse model
of humans with non-malignant skin cancer, were presented today (March
21) in an exhibit at the 40th annual meeting of the Society of Toxicology
in Nashville, Tenn. UI researchers also reported that PCB-exposed mice
also ate more and grew fatter, regardless of exposure to light.
"The statistical power of our experiments leads us to believe that
our results likely underestimate the strength of our conclusions,"
said Rhian B. Cope, a professor of veterinary biosciences in the UI
College of Veterinary Medicine. "Because PCB-contaminated soil
and sun exposure are both extremely common, we must look at this issue
in humans."
In the study, funded by the American Cancer Society, researchers exposed
a group of mice for 77 days to soil from a Southern Illinois landfill
site contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls and polychlorinated
dibenzofurans, a PCB byproduct. Some of the mice were then exposed five
days a week for 28 weeks to solar ultraviolet radiation.
Researchers found that the PCB-sunlight combination led to a rapid growth
of non-melanoma tumors on the non-light-exposed undersides of the mice.
The tumors were slow growing and did not turn into squamous cell carcinomas,
"thus demonstrating their low malignant potential," the authors
noted. PCB-exposed mice kept out of the light did not develop such tumors.
By day 281, other results surfaced. Mice exposed to sunlight but not
the contaminated soil had developed twice the number of skin tumors
in light-exposed areas than had PCB- and light-exposed mice.
It was believed that the PCB-PCDF-contaminated soil, which caused chloracne
(an acne-like eruption associated with dioxin exposure), served as a
sunscreen, at least during early stages of exposure to UV light, Cope
said.
"Our results were complex, but it was clear that tumor growth was
dependant on whether or not an animals skin was irradiated,"
Cope said. "The only time we saw tumors at any site was in the
presence of UV irradiation. It was clear that UV light promotes the
development of tumors at non-light-exposed sites that were probably
initiated by exposure to PCBs and PCDFs."
In 1998, according to the American Academy of Dermatology, there were
up to 1.2 million cases of non-melanona skin cancers in the United States,
a number that may be underreported, Cope said.
Soil used in the study came from the Sangamo Landfill on the Crab Orchard
Wildlife Refuge, said collaborator Larry G. Hansen, a professor of veterinary
biosciences. "It had a high PCB content, at least as high as some
areas in Anniston, Ala."
Numerous lawsuits have resulted since the 1970s, when Monsanto ended
40 years of production of PCB, which was used to insulate electrical
transformers, at its Anniston plant. "PCB contamination is a more
widespread problem than most people realize," Hansen said, noting
that millions of dollars are being spent on clean-up projects on the
Hudson River in the northeast and in the Anniston area. "Several
industrial areas of Europe also are highly contaminated," he added.
Hansen will present additional findings of the study at the Second PCB
Workshop, May 7-11, in Brno, Czech Republic. He also will chair a session
on human exposure and health effects, during which he will discuss human
exposure at Anniston.
The UI study also will be detailed during the American Society of Photobiology
annual meeting, July 13-17, in Quebec. Working with Cope and Hansen
on the project are veterinary student Kanjana Imsilp and Carla K. Morrow,
a research associate, both of the department of veterinary biosciences.
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