In the News
As reported by the U.S. News and World Report, February 21, 2008.
Shedding Light On A Cause Of Breast Cancer
By Ben Harder
When Edison invented the light bulb, did he accidentally spawn a
cancer epidemic? It's certainly starting to look that way. In study
after recent study, exposure to artificial light has been linked to
certain kinds of tumors, especially those in the breast.
Consider some of the evidence: Blind women have low rates of
breast cancer. So do women in underdeveloped countries, where
artificial lighting is an uncommon luxury. By contrast, female
nurses and other women who frequently work night shifts have high
breast cancer rates. The reason, experts believe, is that their
schedules expose them to illumination during what should be the
darkest hours of their days, and that disrupts the body's production
of the cancer-suppressing hormone melatonin. In lab experiments,
human breast tumors have been found to grow relatively quickly when
fed by the blood of women who have been in a brightly lit room in
the middle of the night. When blood is drawn from women who've been
sitting in darkness, it's richer in melatonin and less nourishing to
the cancer.
Based on those and other observations, a unit of the World Health
Organization announced in December that shift work is a "probable
human carcinogen." But shift work may be merely the tip of Edison's
epidemic.
In fact, any woman whose community is filled with streetlamps and
other light sources may face an unnaturally high risk of breast
cancer. A new study, slated to appear in the journal Chronobiology
International, finds that breast cancer incidence is about 73
percent higher in communities with the greatest amount of artificial
light at night than in communities with the least. The researchers
assessed different communities' nocturnal light levels by analyzing
satellite images of how much illumination escapes into space. (You
can see this
Washington Post article for details.)
Light pollution seems to have other untoward consequences,
including
harmful
effects on animals like migratory birds and sea turtles. But the
apparently
carcinogenic effects of light pollution have received—and
arguably deserve—the lion's share of scientists' attention. No one
has paid more notice to the light-cancer connection than Richard
Stevens, the University of Connecticut Health Center epidemiologist
who first proposed a possible link more than two decades ago.
Stevens collaborated on the new study with four colleagues in
Israel, and I asked him to comment on its significance.
He was quick to say that the study falls short of proving cause
and effect. But it's consistent, he said, with the hypothesis that
light at night accounts for a "substantial fraction of breast
cancer."
"Lighting the night is as important an ecological issue for the
planet as global warming," he added. "In addition to its effects on
all life forms, unnecessary lighting of the night accounts for a lot
of fossil fuel consumption and also contributes to global warming." |