Black MD: In rare occasions, dark-skinned people can get skin cancer. But sunscreens won’t help.

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washingtonpost.com
Perspective | In rare occasions, dark-skinned people can get skin cancer. But sunscreens won’t help.
By Adewole S. Adamson May 26
6-8 minutes
Melanoma is a potentially deadly form of skin cancer linked to overexposure to ultraviolet, or UV, rays from the sun. Sunscreen can block UV rays and therefore reduce the risk of sun burns, which ultimately reduces the risk of developing melanoma. Thus, the promotion of sunscreen as an effective melanoma prevention strategy is a reasonable public health message.

While this may be true for light-skinned people, such as those of European descent, this is not the case for darker skinned people, or those of African descent.

The public health messages promoted by many clinicians and public health groups regarding sunscreen recommendations for dark-skinned people is incongruent with the available evidence. Media messaging exacerbates the problem with headline after headline warning that black people can also develop melanoma and that blacks are not immune. To be sure, blacks can get melanoma, but the risk is very low.
In the same way, men can develop breast cancer, but we do not promote mammography as a strategy to fight breast cancer in men.

This message is important to me as a black, board-certified dermatologist and health services researcher at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin, where I am director of the pigmented lesion clinic. In this capacity, I take care of patients at high risk for melanoma.

In the United States, melanoma is 20 to 30 times more common among whites than blacks.

In blacks, melanoma usually develops in parts of the body that get less sun exposure, such as the palms of the hands and soles of the feet. These cancers are called “acral lentiginous melanomas,” and sunscreen will do nothing to reduce the risk of these cancers.


When was the last time you had a sunburn on the palms or soles? Even among whites, there is no relationship between sun exposure and the risk of acral lentiginous melanomas. Famously, Jamaican singer Bob Marley died of such a melanoma on his great toe, but sunscreen would not have helped.

The research on the association of UV radiation and melanoma among blacks is lacking. Most studies assessing the relationship exclude patients of darker skin types. In the largest study of this question to date, no connection was found between UV index or latitude and melanoma among black people.

Many dermatologists often point out that black patients tend to show up to the doctor with later stage melanoma, which is true. But this is an issue of access and awareness and has nothing to do with sunscreen application. Black people should be aware of growths on their skin and seek medical attention if they have any changing, bleeding, painful or otherwise concerning spots, particularly on the hands and feet.

The notion, however, that regular application of daily sunscreen will reduce an already extremely rare occurrence is nonsensical.

UV radiation does affect dark skin and can cause DNA damage; the damage, however, is seven to eight times lower than the damage done to white skin, given the natural sun-protective effect of increased melanin in darker skin.
:sas2:
To be clear, using regular sunscreen may help with reducing other effects of the sun’s rays such as sun burns, wrinkling, photoaging and freckling, which are all positive. But for black people on average, sunscreen is unlikely to reduce their low risk of melanoma any further.


If sunscreen was important in the prevention of melanoma in dark-skinned patients, then why have we never heard of an epidemic of melanoma in sub-Saharan Africa, a region with intense sun, a lot of black people and little sunscreen? :whoo:

In certain sub-populations of black people, such as those with disorders causing sun sensitivity, albino patients or patients with suppressed immune systems, sunscreen use may reduce the risk of melanoma. But if you don’t fall into one of these categories, any meaningful risk reduction from the application of sunscreen is unlikely.

A one-size-fits-all approach misses the mark when it comes to the public health message related to sunscreen, skin cancer and black people. The facts simply do not add up for the recommendation of sunscreen as prevention of melanoma in black people.

Many dermatology and skin-cancer-focused organizations (a few of which I’m a member), promote the public health message of sunscreen use to reduce melanoma risk among black patients. But this message is not supported by evidence. There exists no study that demonstrates sunscreen reduces skin cancer risk in black people. Period.

This issue of regular sunscreen use in black people was made even more pressing after the release of a recent study on sunscreen absorption in the Journal of the American Medical Association. This study showed that significant amounts of certain chemical sunscreen ingredients can get in the blood when used at maximal conditions, with unknown impacts on human health.

To me, the most shocking part of the study was that most of the participants were black, the group least likely to derive any meaningful associated health benefits from sunscreen, while being exposed to potentially harmful levels of chemicals.

As dermatologists and public health advocates, we can do a better job educating patients and the public about melanoma prevention, without promoting public health messages that are grounded in fear or lack evidence. Black people should be informed that they are at risk of developing melanoma, but that risk is low.

Any dark-skinned person who develops a new, changing or symptomatic mole should see their doctor, particularly if the mole is on the palms or soles.
We don’t know what the risk factors are for melanoma in black or dark-skinned people, but they certainly are not UV rays.

health-science@washpost.com

Adewole S. Adamson is an assistant professor of internal medicine (division of dermatology) at the University of Texas at Austin. This report was originally published on theconversation.com.
 
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TL;DR:

  • Blacks rarely get sun-caused melanoma
  • The skin cancer black people get comes from areas not exposed to the sun, and is often later discovered so we still need to pay attention to our skin
  • Theres minimal evidence of sun screen helping black people while exposing us to questionable chemicals
 

Coco Loco

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-Yes black people need to wear sunscreen, spf 35 or higher. Please reapply it every 90 minutes, at the beach or just on a normal day.
-My uncle was diagnosed with skin cancer 5 years ago. They caught it early, he's fine.
 
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Jimmy from Linkedin

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nap you've done so much emphasizing, that it has effectively de-emphasized the entire text. Also, consider a theme for how you emphasize. Most people use bold and italics, instead of colors that can largely be absent to the color-blind.

Interesting article, a lot of indigo-dyed cloth and linen can block UV rays. Function = form for african fabrics
 

froggle

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TL;DR:

  • Blacks rarely get sun-caused melanoma
  • The skin cancer black people get comes from areas not exposed to the sun, and is often later discovered so we still need to pay attention to our skin
  • Theres minimal evidence of sun screen helping black people while exposing us to questionable chemicals

I went to the beach the other day and I looked like this

12-popular-sunscreens-tried-2005014.jpg



Everyone was like :russ::russ::russ::russ: black people dont get sunburn..............................................:ufdup::ufdup::ufdup: being 3 days in the sun and beach no protection....EVERYONE's skin started to strip.

:pachaha::pachaha::pachaha:...i was like, :sas2::sas1: "You were saying"

:birdman: I don't play with the sun, as black as I am
 

RTF

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Black people only need sunscreen when first adjusting to high levels of sun. You can't go from mild to very hot - you will get burnt. But after a while you will be fine. Once your skin adjusts you will not get burnt. You need to let your melanin load but once loaded it's purpose is to protect you.

Black people in cool climates really need MORE sun. Vitamin D supplements are useless, you need actual sun rays. It will lower your blood pressure.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Every black person should understand that these studies apply to white people,but people like OP trust whatever these white scientist throw at him and tells us we should believe it too:respect:. Now here he is today attempting to take a victory lap.
you idiot. the problem is that black people weren't ever signing up for the research, if they were, we'd have reached these conclusions YEARS ago
 

Fillerguy

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nap you've done so much emphasizing, that it has effectively de-emphasized the entire text. Also, consider a theme for how you emphasize. Most people use bold and italics, instead of colors that can largely be absent to the color-blind.

Interesting article, a lot of indigo-dyed cloth and linen can block UV rays. Function = form for african fabrics
Dap, and rep. I have no idea what you're saying but it sounds smart.
 

Benefited

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you idiot. the problem is that black people weren't ever signing up for the research, if they were, we'd have reached these conclusions YEARS ago


Tuskegee Study - Timeline - CDC - NCHHSTP

Nah we good.
I tried to put you dudes on to Natureboy who has been saying this for years but you dudes wouldn't listen and more than likely called it pseudoscience,I get it he's weird. But I'm sure other teachers have been saying the same. Black people can get sunburn ,but its due to whats in our bodies,based on unhealthy eating. The food these crackas are feeding us essentially is turning us into Buffy the Vampire Slayer vampires:mjlol:. If you don't understand that,black people signing up wouldn't have done shyt because you would still see unhealthy GMO'd black people being burnt by the sun,which is not a true indication of a full strenght black body:respect:
 
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