Sunlight
emerging as proven treatment for breast
cancer, prostate cancer and other cancers
Tuesday, July 19, 2005
Taking a daily 10 to 15 minute walk in the
sun not only clears your head, relieves
stress and increases circulation – it could
also cut your risk of breast cancer in half.
At least that's what Esther John, an
epidemiologist at the Northern California
Cancer Center, recommends. And there's
plenty of proof to back her up. One study
found that sunlight exposure lowered the
risk of breast cancer by 30 to 40 percent.
In The Breast Cancer Prevention Diet,
Dr. Robert Arnot claims that national rates
of breast cancer inversely correlate to
solar radiation exposure. In other words,
breast cancer occurs at a much higher rate
in colder, cloudier northern regions than in
sunnier southern regions. Johns Hopkins
University Medical School conducted a
ten-year epidemiological study that showed
exposure to full-spectrum light (including
the ultraviolet frequencies) is positively
related to the prevention of breast, colon
and rectal cancers.
How does this work? There is in fact a
scientific answer. The sun stimulates
production of a hormone in your skin.
Ultraviolet B rays, the kind of rays that
give you sunburns, interact with a special
cholesterol in unblocked skin. Once
stimulated, this cholesterol triggers your
liver and kidney to make vitamin D3. Vitamin
D3 isn't exactly a vitamin, but rather a
type of steroid hormone that can drastically
improve your immune system function.
Vitamin D3 also controls cellular growth
and helps you absorb calcium from your
digestive tract. Most importantly, this
hormone/vitamin inhibits the growth of
cancer cells. In laboratory tests performed
on animals, vitamin D3 inhibited the growth
of malignant melanoma, breast cancer,
leukemia and mammary tumors. Vitamin D3 also
slowed down angiogenesis, which aids the
growth of cancer cells. Vitamin D3 stops
cancer-aiding blood vessels from being
formed, curbing the tumor's ability to
spread and disrupt other functions in the
body. Donald R. Yance Jr. writes that
vitamin D3 may also inhibit the activity of
hormones such as estrogen in breast cancer,
thereby decreasing its spread.
Since high doses of vitamin D3 are toxic,
scientists have formulated vitamin D
derivatives that can be administered to
breast cancer patients. In tests, these
derivatives have stopped the proliferation
of breast cancer cells and sometimes have
actually decreased the size of experimental
mammary tumors. Further findings like these
might point to yet another undiscovered
function of vitamin D3: regulating the
expression of protein products that prevent
and even inhibit breast cancer.
There is a concern relevant to this
issue. Haven't we been told for the last 10
years to stay out of the sun? What about
skin cancer? Dr. Richard Hobday, author of
The Healing Sun, says our fear of
the sun does more harm than good. Most
recommended daily sunscreens block
ultraviolet B rays, the same rays that
trigger the production of vitamin D. The
number of people who die from breast cancer,
colon cancer, prostate cancer, ovarian
cancer, heart disease, multiple sclerosis
and osteoporosis -- all maladies that
sunlight could benefit -- is far greater
than the number of deaths from skin cancer.
After reviewing 50 years of medical
literature on cancer, Dr. Gordon Ainsleigh
concluded that the benefits of regular
sun exposure outweigh the risks of squamous-basal
skin cancer, accelerated ageing and melanoma.
Despite the obvious advantages, most
Americans are not getting enough vitamin D.
Massachusetts General Hospital recently
found that 59 percent of hospitalized
patients had too little vitamin D in their
bloodstream. Many experts infer that the
Massachusetts vitamin D deficiency is almost
as widespread in the general American
population. Evidence also suggests that
people with heavily pigmented skin (darker
skin color) require more sunlight for
adequate vitamin D production.
Given the obvious need for vitamin D,
many researchers are looking for other
sources for providing it to patients. While
sunlight is the best naturally occurring
source of vitamin D3 for humans, there are
alternatives to a leisurely walk in the sun.
Sheldon Saul Hendler, MD, PhD, describes an
interesting paradox: While people living in
Japan are exposed to relatively low levels
of sunlight, the incidence of cancer among
Japanese is very low. Hendler claims that
the resistance to cancer apparent among the
Japanese is explained by their diet, which
includes large quantities of fatty fish that
are rich in vitamin D.
Other sources of vitamin D include
salmon, tuna, fish oils and vitamin D
supplements. If you plan on drinking vitamin
D fortified milk, however, be warned:
Researchers at Boston University School of
Medicine found the labels misleading. 80
percent of milk samples contained either 20
percent less or 20 percent more vitamin D
than the amount advertised on labels. Too
much vitamin D can be toxic and cause
calcification in the kidneys and heart. So
watch for the warning signs: anorexia,
disorientation, dehydration, fatigue, weight
loss, weakness and vomiting.
The experts speak on sunlight and breast
cancer
The annual death rate from breast cancer
varies considerably from region to region,
practically doubling from the US South and
Southwest to the high-risk Northeast. In
addition, the risk of fatal breast cancer in
the major cities is "inversely proportional
to intensity of local sunlight." It
increased in low sunlight areas and
decreased in sunnier climes. Vitamin D,
created in the course of exposure to
sunlight, is thus associated with a low risk
of fatal breast cancer. The Garlands
concluded that differences in the amount of
ultraviolet light reaching the population
may account for the striking regional
differences in breast cancer deaths (5). The
same was true in the Soviet Union (6). Cancer Therapy by Ralph W Moss PhD,
page 67
In tropical nations, where exposure to
sunlight is normal, the incidence of
osteoporosis, hip and spinal fracture,
cataracts, and colon and breast cancer is
less common. The lack of sunlight seen in
cold climates in winter causes a failure of
adequate vitamin D production which damages
the immune system and may lead to more
cancer than is seen in warm climates where
vitamin D levels tend to be higher. A Physicians Guide To Natural Health
Products That Work By James Howenstine MD,
page 173
Cancer: A ten-year epidemiological study
conducted at Johns Hopkins University
Medical School, in Baltimore, Maryland,
showed that exposure to full-spectrum light
(including the ultraviolet frequency) is
positively related to the prevention of
breast, colon, and rectal cancers. Another
report found that exposure to full-spectrum
sunlight reduced the risk of developing
breast cancer. In Russia, a full-spectrum
lighting system was installed in factories
where colds and sore throats had become
commonplace among workers. This lowered the
bacterial contamination of the air by
40%-70%. Workers who did not receive the
full-spectrum light were absent twice as
many days as those who did. Alternative Medicine by Burton
Goldberg, page 305
Sunlight stimulates a hormone in skin
that triggers the liver and kidney to make
the active form of vitamin D3. Two equally
effective sources of vitamin D in humans are
derived from plant ergosterol, which is
converted to ergocalciferol (vitamin D2) and
cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) by the action
of sunlight on the skin. The body uses
vitamin D3 for normal immune system
function, to control cellular growth, and to
absorb calcium from the digestive tract.
Vitamin D3 can inhibit the growth of
malignant melanoma, breast cancer, leukemia,
and mammary tumors in laboratory animals.
Vitamin D3 can also inhibit angiogenesis,
the growth of new blood vessels that permit
the spread of cancer cells through the body.
In warm weather, about 10-15 minutes of
direct sun (in morning or late afternoon, to
avoid skin damage) two to three times a week
can produce sufficient vitamin D. As we age,
however, our skin becomes less efficient at
making vitamin D. People who live in cloudy
climates with long winters may not get
enough vitamin D. Many health experts
believe that adults may benefit from 400 to
800 international units of vitamin D. But
don't exceed this amount without your
doctor's advice, since too much vitamin D
can be toxic. Vitamin D can cause
calcification in the kidneys, heart, and
other tissues. Symptoms of vitamin D
toxicity include anorexia, disorientation,
dehydration, fatigue, weight loss, weakness,
and vomiting. Permanent Remissions by Robert Haas
MS, page 215
Vitamin D may have the ability to inhibit
the proliferative activity of hormones, such
as estrogen in breast cancer, and has been
shown to suppress breast and prostate cancer
growth. Sunlight exposure, which leads to an
increased level of vitamin D, correlates
with a reduced risk of breast cancer. I
usually recommend small amounts of vitamin D
(400 to 1,000 IU) for those people without
sunlight exposure, especially during the
winter. I also occasionally recommend cod
liver oil during the winter months as a
source of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids.
Vitamin D deficiency is very common in the
elderly and in people who live in parts of
the world with little sunlight; it is also
one of the major contributing factors to
osteoporosis. Herbal Medicine Healing Cancer by
Donald R Yance Jr, page 186
Vitamin D3 can be toxic in doses required
to slow down the spread of breast cancer, so
scientists have formulated vitamin-D
derivatives that inhibit the proliferation
of breast cancer cells and cause regression
of experimental mammary tumors. Taken
together, these facts suggest that vitamin D
and its derivatives may play a role in
regulating the expression of genes and
protein products that prevent and inhibit
breast cancer. The cancer-stopping power of
vitamin D has been documented in
osteosarcoma (bone cancer), melanoma, colon
cancer, and breast cancer. These cancer
cells contain vitamin-D receptors that make
them susceptible to the anticancer effects
of this vitamin-hormone made by the skin
when it is exposed to sunlight. Vitamin
D-rich foods include salmon, tuna, fish
oils, and vitamin D-fortified milk and
breakfast cereals. Caution: Since vitamin D
can be toxic in high doses. Permanent Remissions by Robert Haas
MS, page 108
A study comparing the health habits of
133 breast cancer patients with women who
did not have the disease found that exposure
to sunlight lowered the risk of breast
cancer by 30 to 40% or more. In reaction to
sunlight exposure, the body manufactures
vitamin D, which is thought to confer the
protective effect. Reducing Cancer Risk by Richard
Harkness Pharm FASCP, page 98
Women who live in southern states are
known to get breast cancer significantly
less than those who live in the North. Some
northern states don't get enough sun from
November to February to make the required
levels of vitamin D. "It's possible that all
it takes is 10 or 15 minutes outside in
bright sunlight to get a benefit," said
Esther John, an epidemiologist at the
Northern California Cancer Center. "And
that's just casual exposure. The sunlight
you get on your face and neck and arms and
hands when you're regularly dressed." So
while the exact dose of sunlight needed is
not known, a brief outdoor stroll might do
it. She said the amount needed to protect
against breast cancer is probably not enough
to cause skin damage. Sunscreens that block
ultraviolet rays would also block the
formation of vitamin D. However, we don't
really know for sure if the benefits of
sunlight are actually due to vitamin D.
Other unrecognized factors may be involved.
Reducing Cancer Risk by Richard
Harkness Pharm FASCP, page 98
However, there is mounting evidence that
vitamin D from sunlight and fish oil may
reduce the incidence of certain cancers,
such as breast cancer. Hence, some vitamin D
residuals in the fish oil may actually
increase its protective value against cancer
as well as CHD. Textbook of Natural Medicine Volumes
1-2 by Joseph E Pizzorno and Michael T
Murray, page 735
Numerous research papers have shown that
metabolites (breakdown products or
derivatives) of active vitamin D can
actually suppress the growth and spread of
malignant melanoma cells. Your eyes aren't
playing tricks on you. We indeed just said
that active vitamin D can retard the
development and spread of melanoma. It is a
tumor-inhibiting hormone. And what's more,
its effects reach much farther than the
skin; research has shown that active vitamin
D can also impede the growth and development
of breast cancer, colon cancer, and cancer
of the prostate. And where do we get active
vitamin D? From the sun—from the interaction
of the UVB portion of sunlight with the
special cholesterol in our unblocked skin.
If adequate sunshine and vitamin D
production can impede the development of
these malignancies, then it stands to reason
that inadequate amounts may promote them.
And indeed that appears to be the case. Some
researchers have even speculated that the
inadequate vitamin D production that occurs
in people with heavily pigmented skin living
in geographic locations with limited
sunlight, such as in northern latitudes and
in the winter, might in part explain why
these cancers behave so much more
aggressively in black Americans (who,
because of heavier pigment, may require more
sunlight for adequate vitamin D production)
than in white ones. (The same might be true
for the millions of people who would never
dream of going outside without covering
every exposed inch of skin with a strong
sunblock to "protect them.") The Protein Power Lifeplan by Michael
R Eades MD and Mary Dan Eades MD, page 242
Breast cancer rates vary directly with
the amount of solar radiation. The colder,
cloudier Northeast has a higher rate of
breast cancer than the warmer, sunnier
South. What's the connection? Exposure to
sunlight helps the body manufacture vitamin
D. Women in the Northeast manufacture less
vitamin D because they are exposed to less
natural sunlight, especially in the winter
season. Here's how researchers made the
connection. They graded a woman's exposure
to the sun by the amount of skin damage she
had suffered. Those with the most severe
loss of elasticity in the skin had,
paradoxically, the lowest risk of breast
cancer! You might wonder why women didn't
make up for the lack of vitamin D through
sunlight by eating the right kinds of
vitamin D-rich foods. A recent study from
Massachusetts General Hospital showed that
59 percent of hospitalized patients had too
little vitamin D in their bloodstream. That
leads many experts to conclude that vitamin
D deficiency is widespread in the general
American population. The Breast Cancer Prevention Diet by
Robert Arnot MD, page 150
To put it bluntly; your life could depend
on it. Sunlight may cause skin cancer, but
there is also evidence that it could prevent
a number of very common and often fatal
diseases: breast cancer; colon cancer;
prostate cancer; ovarian cancer; heart
disease; multiple sclerosis; and
osteoporosis. When combined, the number of
people who die from these conditions is far
greater than the number of deaths from skin
cancer; which is why the current bias
against sunlight needs, in my opinion, to be
redressed, and why I would advise you to
read this book. The Healing Sun by Richard Hobday,
page 11
There have been a number of scientific
studies in the last 20 years that support
the view that sunlight can inhibit cancer,
and it is clear that the mortality and
incidence of breast cancer and colon cancer
in North America and other areas of the
world increases with increasing latitude. In
1992, Dr Gordon Ainsleigh published a paper
in the journal Preventive Medicine in which
he reviewed 50 years worth of medical
literature on cancer and the sun. He
concluded that the benefits of regular sun
exposure appear to outweigh by a
considerable degree the risks of squamous-basal
skin cancer, accelerated ageing, and
melanoma. He found trends in epidemiological
studies suggesting that widespread adoption
of regular moderate sunbathing would result
in approximately a one-third lowering of
breast and colon cancer death rates in the
United States. Colon cancer and breast
cancer are the second and third leading
causes of cancer deaths in North America and
Dr Ainsleigh estimated that about 30,000
cancer deaths would be prevented each year
if moderate sunbathing on a regular basis
became the norm. The Healing Sun by Richard Hobday,
page 68
Interestingly, a country which is an
exception to the link between low sunlight
exposure and high incidence of colorectal
and breast cancer is Japan. Even though
people living in Japan are exposed to the
low amount of sunlight, which is associated
with these cancers in other areas, the
incidence is very low in that country. This
is undoubtedly because the Japanese eat a
large quantity of fatty fish, which is rich
in vitamin D. Vitamin And Mineral Encyclopedia by
Sheldon Saul Hendler MD PhD, page 98
Breast cancer is the most common form of
cancer in women, causing about 370,000
deaths annually worldwide. Each year some
220,000 women in Europe and 180,000 women in
North America are diagnosed with the
disease. About 15,000 British women die of
breast cancer annually, a death rate that is
higher than elsewhere in Western Europe. One
in 12 British women will develop breast
cancer at some time in their lives and, as
we have already seen, the incidence of
breast cancer is increasing. The reasons for
this are not altogether clear, but lack of
sunlight could be a factor. In 1989 the Drs
Garland, together with Dr Edward Gorham,
published the first ever epidemiological
work on the relationship between sun
exposure and breast cancer (see Table 4).
Their research demonstrated that, as in the
case of colon cancer, there was a strong
negative correlation between available
sunlight and breast cancer death rates. The
chances of women from areas of the United
States with less available sunlight dying of
breast cancer were 40 per cent higher than
those of women who lived in Hawaii or
Florida. The Healing Sun by Richard Hobday,
page 70
Since vitamin D can be toxic in doses
that greatly exceed this value, researchers
have developed synthetic analogues of
vitamin D that retain the ability to inhibit
cancer cell growth without the toxicity
associated with high doses. These analogs
have been successfully used in animal models
of leukemia and breast cancer. Vitamin D may
be related to other cancers. One study found
that women who get low levels of sunlight
experience high rates of breast cancer,
suggesting that low vitamin D levels may
play a preventive role in the disease. Low
blood levels of vitamin D have been found in
people with colon cancer. Permanent Remissions by Robert Haas
MS, page 132
As far as internal cancers are concerned,
few physicians seem to have actually used
sunlight therapeutically. One notable
exception is the American physician Dr Zane
Kime. In his book, sunlight Could Save Your
Life, which was published in 1980, Dr Kime
describes how he encouraged one of his
patients with breast cancer to sunbathe. He
took this rather unusual step following a
consultation with a 41-year-old woman whose
breast cancer had spread to her lungs and
bones. She had already undergone a
mastectomy and chemotherapy but to no avail.
Dr Kime did not treat the cancer directly
but instead, introduced a programme to
improve the general health of his patient.
She was only allowed to eat whole foods, and
all of the refined polyunsaturated oils and
fats were removed from her diet. She was
also encouraged to spend time sunbathing;
and the combination of diet and sunlight
seems to have achieved remarkable results.
Within a few months the patient was back at
work and in the years that followed there
were no apparent symptoms of her
metastasized cancer. Unfortunately Dr Kime
did not devote much of his book to this
episode, nor did he state how many years of
remission his patient enjoyed and, sadly, Dr
Kime died in 1992. The Healing Sun by Richard Hobday,
page 75
Overview:
Sunlight emerging as proven
treatment for breast cancer, prostate
cancer and other cancers
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