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Study links night shifts
with colon cancer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Nurses who work regular night shifts
have a higher risk of colon cancer, a study found,
suggesting a relationship between the amount of sunlight
exposure and the cancer. The study by researchers at Harvard
Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston
supports earlier research that found women who work night
shifts have a higher risk of breast cancer.
"Because night-shift work has become very common in
developed countries, future studies should assess the
relationship of light exposure to the risk of other cancers
and consider the risks in men," they wrote in their report,
published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that about 4
percent of adults work rotating night shifts. Shift work
disrupts normal melatonin production and increases levels of
other hormones such as estrogen. Women's cancers are often
linked with estrogen, but Dr. Eva Schernhammer, who led the
study, said melatonin may play a more important role. "While
this finding needs to be replicated in future studies, the
data is beginning to show that it may be melatonin, not
estrogen, that is influencing cancer risk," she said in a
statement. "If melatonin's anti-cancer properties are the
source of our observed effects, this research opens a whole
new arena of potential associations between exposure to
light and a variety of cancers."
The researchers studied 78,586 women taking part in a
long-running program called the Nurses' Health Study. The
nurses who worked night shifts at least three times a month
for 15 years or more had a 35 percent greater risk of colon
or rectal cancer. Melatonin is produced at night and regular
exposure to sunlight affects the production cycle, which
peaks in the middle of the night. Artificial light
suppresses melatonin production. "Melatonin has well
established anticarcinogenic properties, and a link between
exposure at night and cancer risk through the melatonin
pathway could offer one plausible explanation for the
increased risk we observed," the researchers wrote. They
noted, however, that further study is needed.
Dr. Suzann Wang's Comments:
This study outlines the need for good quality sleep. These
women who were studied had irregular sleep patterns and I
would venture to guess that this study suggests that those
of us who are not getting a good night's sleep can be at
risk for chronic illnesses as well. Sleep is your body's way
of resting and recuperating from the day's stresses and
events. Dreaming is important to the healing process of
sleep too. Not everyone needs the same number of hours of
sleep but ensuring that you are getting good quality sleep
without too much waking is essential. If you are waking too
often in the night and have difficulty falling asleep again
or just can't get to sleep, these issues need to be
addressed.