THE MOSS REPORTS
"We are least open to precise knowledge concerning the things
we are most vehement about," wrote the twentieth century social
philosopher Eric Hoffer.
It is remarkable how easily and how often the medical profession
– a profession which prides itself above all else on being
firmly grounded in science – falls back on blunt dogma when
its official positions are challenged.
The current debate over the advisability of exposing one's skin
to sunlight is a case in point. While the dermatology profession
as a whole has cleaved to a rigidly anti-sunlight position, issuing
dire warnings about the cancer risks of sunlight exposure and encouraging
everyone to don sunscreens before going outdoors, a small but growing
number of scientists and dissident dermatologists are beginning
to challenge that position. The dermatology profession has reacted
with anger to those who have dared to raise doubts about the advisability
of avoiding sunlight.
Readers of this newsletter will recall, for example, the case of
Dr. Michael Holick, of Boston University, who was forced to resign
after writing a book which encouraged people to seek moderate sun
exposure for the good of their health. This week I report on the
case of Dr. Bernard Ackerman, MD, another dissident dermatologist
who has spoken out about on the issue of sunlight and health.
For the past thirty years I have been studying the world of cancer
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and alternative medicine have to offer. The fruits of this work
are embodied in The Moss Reports,
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than 200 different cancer diagnoses.
If you or someone you love has received a diagnosis of cancer,
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Report on your specific cancer type by calling Diane
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We look forward to helping you.
ANOTHER DISSIDENT DERMATOLOGIST
A. Bernard Ackerman, MD, is an exceptionally distinguished dermatologist
and one of the world's foremost authorities on the subject of skin
cancer. In 1999, after a long career in academic medicine, he founded
and became director of the Ackerman Academy of Dermatopathology
in New York.
Largely because of his leadership and high standards, Dr. Ackerman's
institution quickly became the world's largest training center in
the field of dermatopathology. (Dermatopathology is the study of
the disease processes that affect the skin. It involves detailed
knowledge of the microscopic anatomy of the skin's structure in
health and disease.) Dr. Ackerman and his six associates examine
more than 100,000 skin specimens and do more than 4,000 consultations
per year. Dr. Ackerman has published 625 research papers and his
list of honors and awards includes this year's Master Award, given
to one person a year by the American Academy of Dermatology.
What makes this accomplished scientist particularly interesting
is not just his distinguished career in academic medicine but the
fact that he challenges some of the dermatology profession's most
cherished dogmas. According to an article in the New York Times
(July 20, 2004), at age 67, Dr. Ackerman "continues to teach
and write, and also to ask for data and question his field's conventional
wisdom."
"The field is just replete with nonsense," he told the
Times. For instance:
- Dr. Ackerman does not believe that the link
between melanoma and sun exposure (a central dogma of dermatology)
has been proven. He himself is deeply tanned and unafraid to expose
his body to the sun.
- He does not believe that sunburns, even the
painful or blistering kind sustained early in life, necessarily
lead to cancer. While some studies do show a small association,
he says, others show none. Even those studies that show some such
correlation "disagree on when the danger period for sunburns
is supposed to be," writes Gina Kolata, author of the New
York Times article. Taken as a whole, "the research is inconsistent
and fails to make the case."
- He doesn't buy the argument that sunscreens
protect against melanoma. He points to a recent editorial in an
orthodox journal, Archives of Dermatology, which also concludes
that there is scant evidence to support this crucial dogma (Bigby
2004).
- Finally, while the incidence of basal cell and
squamous cell carcinoma have been shown to be closely linked to
lifetime sun exposure, Dr. Ackerman challenges the tenet that
the more intense a person's exposure to the sun, the greater their
risk of melanoma. He believes that the data for this also is not
compelling. Although we are told that the incidence of melanoma
increases in populations that live nearer the equator, the correlation
is not that simple. Epidemiological data on melanoma, says Dr.
Ackerman, are imprecise and inaccurate. The data simply "cannot
demonstrate cause and effect."
Indeed, a recent case-control study of 966 patients (Kennedy, 2003)
studying the effect of painful sunburns and lifetime sun exposure
on the incidence of several types of skin cancer concluded that
lifetime sun exposure is predominantly linked to an increased risk
of squamous cell carcinoma and to a lesser degree with two common
types of basal cell carcinoma. By contrast, this study found that
lifetime sun exposure appeared to be associated with a lower risk
of malignant melanoma.
Dr. Ackerman advises people to stay out of the sun in order to
avoid premature aging of their skin. He also says that if you are
very fair, you can prevent squamous cell carcinoma, a less dangerous
cancer, by avoiding sunlight. (Squamous cell carcinomas, although
they can be disfiguring, are rarely life-threatening.) But don't
make the mistake of thinking that by avoiding sunlight or using
sunscreen you will be protected against deadly melanoma. This, he
says, is a myth.
Other knowledgeable researchers agree that sunscreens fail to protect
against melanoma. Dr. William B. Grant, for example, who heads the
Sunlight, Nutrition and Health Research Center (SUNARC) in San Francisco,
points out that sunscreens primarily block the shorter wavelength
ultraviolet (UV) radiation, whereas it is the longer wavelength
UV that poses the greater risk for melanoma.
Dr. Grant feels that while there is some evidence pointing to a
link between sunlight and melanoma, it is not a simple cause and
effect relationship. There are many other factors that have to be
taken into account. For example, Dr. Grant points out that while
it is true that melanoma rates increase with increasing latitude,
it is also true that even as far north as Canada, Denmark and the
Netherlands, occupational exposure to solar UV radiation is associated
with a reduced risk of melanoma. Conversely, for those of northern
European ancestry living south of their latitude of origin, such
as in Australia, New Zealand and the US, melanoma rates are much
higher than they are in their countries of origin.
In addition, Dr. Grant points out that there is substantial evidence
that dietary factors, particularly vitamin D, can have a significant
effect on the risk of developing melanoma. He points to the work
of Millen and colleagues, of the National Institutes of Health,
showing that diets rich in vitamin D and carotenoids, and low in
alcohol, may be associated with a reduction in risk for melanoma
(Millen, 2004). Therefore, Dr. Grant feels that diverse factors
including diet, skin type, the presence, number and type of moles,
and ethnic, ancestral and geographic origin also have a major influence
on melanoma risk. To say that sunlight causes melanoma is at best
an oversimplification and at worst a distortion of the scientific
evidence (Grant, 2004).
A Melanoma ‘Epidemic'
Dr. Ackerman is a questioning sort of person. He even debates whether
the much-vaunted "epidemic" of melanoma actually exists.
The definition of melanoma, he points out, has changed over the
past few decades, leading doctors to diagnose, remove and cure lesions
that until recently would not have been called melanoma at all.
"The criteria today, clinically and histopathologically, are
diametrically different from those 30 years ago," he said.
In medical school, he told the Times, "we were taught that
melanoma is a big, black, fungating tumor that kills. Who would
have believed then that you can recognize melanoma for what it is
when it is small and flat and the size of the fingernail on your
pinky? You would have said they were insane" (Kolata 2004).
As noted, a central dogma of the dermatology profession is that
sun exposure promotes melanoma. The American Academy of Dermatology's
website states that it is clear that excessive sun exposure can
promote the development of melanoma. But if this is correct why
do African-Americans and Asians develop melanoma precisely on those
parts of the skin that are not exposed to sunlight - the palms,
soles, nails and mucous membranes? Even among whites, the most common
melanoma sites are the leg (in women) and the trunk (in men). These
are hardly the most sun-exposed body parts. Why not on the face
and arms, which are much more frequently exposed to Old Sol?
Ackerman's arguments (and he is by no means alone in feeling this
way) leave conventional dermatologists sputtering with frustration.
One leader in the field told the New York Times that "it was
perverse of Dr. Ackerman to pick the data apart." But is it
perverse to question dogmatic beliefs? This official further claimed
that melanoma can occur in unexposed places because "sunlight
suppresses immune cells in the skin's surface that ordinarily hold
cancer at bay." While many would undoubtedly disagree with
him, Dr. Ackerman does not accept this ‘immune surveillance'
argument. He sees it as a tenuous theory manufactured in order to
support a dubious hypothesis.
This insightful interview with Dr. Ackerman comes at a crucial
moment in the history of dermatology. In my opinion, the dermatologists
have painted themselves into a corner on the issue of sun exposure,
sunscreens and melanoma. The best that can be said is that they
are trying to stem what they perceive to be a rising tide of preventable
melanoma cases with a public health campaign. But the science behind
this campaign is shaky, at best.
Some leaders of the field, such as Dr. Ackerman, are now trying
to help their profession find its way back into the light. Although
it is not mentioned in this interview, the recent forced resignation
of Michael Holick, MD, PhD, from his dermatology professorship at
Boston University has overshadowed this debate and moved it from
the back rooms of Academe squarely into the medico-political realm.
As readers of this newsletter may remember, Holick was asked to
resign after he expressed opinions that were essentially identical
to those of Dr. Ackerman. But Dr. Holick took his arguments directly
to the laypeople in a popular book (The
UV Advantage) and—unlike the retired Dr. Ackerman—was
in a position that was vulnerable to retaliation.
For my previous articles on Dr. Holick click or go to any one of
the following:
http://www.cancerdecisions.com/052204.html
http://www.cancerdecisions.com/053004.html
http://www.cancerdecisions.com/071104.html
I believe the dermatology profession should reconsider its dogmatic
positions on the relationship of sunlight to melanoma. It should
also reexamine its embrace of the sunscreen industry, whose sales
have grown from $18 million in 1972 to almost a half billion dollars
today. The supposedly protective effect of sunscreen against the
development of melanoma is a major reason for that boom. According
to medical writer Michael Castleman, writing in Mother Jones magazine:
"...[D]ermatologists get much of their information from the
SCF [Skin Cancer Foundation, ed.], and the SCF, in turn, is heavily
supported by the sunscreen industry. (A sunscreen manufacturer even
funded SCF's quarterly consumer publication, "Sun and Skin
News.") No wonder the foundation doesn't give much credence
to the growing number of studies showing that even so-called broad-spectrum
sunscreen doesn't prevent melanoma. Like the road-destroying trucks
that guaranteed work for the concrete company, rising melanoma rates
scare people into using more sunscreen" (Castleman 1998).
The Skin Cancer Foundation has dozens of members of the sunscreen
industry, such as Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson and Procter &
Gamble, on its "Corporate Council." In return, the SCF
awards its Seal of Recommendation to many of these same companies'
products. It is a cozy relationship indeed.
http://www.skincancer.org/joinus/corporate_council_members.php
To restore their collective good name, dermatologists need to come
clean with the public about what is scientifically proven and what
is merely speculative about the relationship between cancer and
sunlight. In particular, truth-seekers in the field need to band
together and demand that B.U. reinstate Dr. Holick. Nothing less
will convince the public of the dermatology profession's intellectual
honesty.

--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.
References:
Bigby, ME. The end of the
sunscreen and melanoma controversy? Arch Dermatol. 2004
Jun;140(6):745-6. Review.
Grant, William B, PhD, personal
communication July 28, 2004. Dr. Grant's Sunlight, Nutrition and
Health Research Center (SUNARC) www.sunarc.org
Kennedy C, Bajdik C , Rein W, et al.,
The influence of painful sunburns and lifetime sun exposure on the
risk of actinic keratoses, seborrheic warts, melanocytic nevi, atypical
nevi and skin cancer. J Investig Dermatol. 120, 1087-1093
(2003)
Kolata, Gina. A Dermatologist
Who's Not Afraid to Sit on the Beach. New York Times, July
20, 2004. Accessed July 24, 2004 from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/20/health/20cont.html
Castleman, Michael. Sunscam:Think
sunscreen protects against cancer? Think again. Mother Jones
May/June 1998. Retrieved on July 24, 2004 from:
http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/1998/05/wellbeing.html
Economics of sunscreen:
http://www.birchtrees.com/casonsun.html
Millen, AE, Tucker, MA, Hartge P, Halpern
A, et al. Diet and melanoma in a case-control study.
Cancer Epidemiolo Biomarkers Prev. 2004 Jun;13(6):1042-51
Sunlight, Nutrition and Health Research
Center (SUNARC) www.sunarc.org
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IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER
The news and other items in this newsletter
are intended for informational purposes only. Nothing in this newsletter
is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice.
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