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Skin cancer








Americans continue to be diagnosed with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, at steadily rising rates.

According to the National Cancer Institute, the rate of new melanoma cases among American adults has tripled since the 1970s.

The reasons for this trend are unclear, as are strategies for preventing it. We don’t know the exact cause of melanoma, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has established that risk factors include family history, fair skin, freckles, moles and modifiable risk factors like solar ultraviolet radiation and indoor tanning.

In early 2021, the Food and Drug Administration released its final sunscreen order, which states that there is growing evidence linking ultraviolet A, or UVA, exposure to skin cancers. To protect consumers, the agency proposed strengthening the required UVA protection of sun protection factor, or SPF, products. EWG has long urged the FDA to set these stronger standards, but since the monograph has yet to be finalized, products that provide inadequate UVA protection are still legally allowed for sale.

Sunlight and skin cancer

More than three million Americans develop skin cancer each year. Most cases involve one of two serious but rarely fatal forms of skin cancer – basal and squamous cell carcinomas. Studies suggest basal and squamous cell cancers are strongly related to UV exposure over a period of years.

Each year an estimated 99,780 Americans will be diagnosed with melanoma, and about 7,650 will die from it. Men have higher rates than women, and the American Cancer Society has estimated that about twice as many American men are expected to die from melanoma as women.

Melanoma is a complex disease with many unanswered questions, but sun exposure appears to play a role. Both UVA and UVB rays can cause melanoma. In the general population, there is a strong correlation between melanoma risk and how often a person has been sunburned, particularly during childhood.

The use of artificial tanning beds dramatically increases melanoma risk, and their use before age 30 increases the risk of developing melanoma by 75 percent, according to calculations by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, or IARC. The IARC Monographs program has classified UV-emitting tanning devices as carcinogenic to humans. For this reason, in 2014 the FDA reclassified tanning beds to require new warnings that state they can damage skin and shouldn’t be used by anyone under age 18.

Don’t rely on sunscreens alone to prevent skin cancer

Every major public health authority – the FDA, the National Cancer Institute and the IARC – has concluded that the available data do not support the assertion that sunscreens alone reduce the rate of skin cancer .

A 2011 study of Australians found they cut their risk of melanoma in half by age 50 when they applied SPF 15 sunscreen daily, wore hats and avoided the sun in other ways. Two 2020 studies, one of perceived skin cancer risk and another on the safety and efficacy of sunscreen, both showed that sunscreens protect against melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers. Other studies have not reached such clear conclusions. Some suggest sunscreen users are at increased risk of melanoma.

Stanford University dermatologists who reviewed data from a national CDC survey concluded that people who relied solely on sunscreen for sun protection got more sunburns than people who reported infrequent sunscreen use but wore hats and clothing to shield themselves from the sun. Researchers have also found that people rarely use a combination of strategies, such as protective (wearing sunglasses and sunscreen), avoidant (seeking shade, avoiding the outdoors), and covering-up (wearing a shirt, hat, or pants).

Sunlight and skin damage

Exposure to sunlight – including both UVA and UVB rays – is also associated with damage to skin cells and DNA and to advanced skin aging. To prevent skin damage and skin cancer effectively, American sunscreens should provide better UVA protection. This won’t happen in all products until the FDA sets higher standards for UVA protection and approves modern sunscreen ingredients with superior UVA filtering and stability.

In the absence of truly protective regulations, consumers are in the worst possible position – likely to think their sunscreen provides more protection than it does, then staying out in the sun longer, thereby increasing their risk of skin cancer and skin damage.