Less sleep bc risk increase
I thought I would post this for fun. I'm a eight hours a night girl and always have been.
Breast cancer risk associated with less sleep in large study population
A new study involving 33,528 women has found a relationship between short sleep duration and an increased risk of breast cancer, as well as an association with reduced melatonin levels. Melatonin is a sleep-promoting hormone released in response to darkness, and is involved in controlling the body's circadian rhythm. Previous research has established a link between low levels of the hormone and increased breast cancer risk.
For the current study, reported in the June 6, 2008 issue of the journal Carcinogenesis, researchers at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, along with scientists at the University of Minnesota and the National University of Singapore utilized data from female participants enrolled in the Singapore Chinese Health Study. Over an 11 year average follow-up period, 525 cases of breast cancer occurred.
An association between increased sleep duration and a reduction in breast cancer risk was observed among postmenopausal women. Those who reported sleeping at least nine hours experienced a 33 percent lower risk than postmenopausal women whose sleep averaged six hours or less. This association was determined to occur primarily among lean women, and was stronger for those without a history of diabetes.
When urine samples collected from 498 subjects were analyzed for a melatonin metabolite in order to examine the relationship between melatonin levels and sleep duration, the researchers found that levels averaged 42 percent higher among those who slept nine hours compared with subjects whose sleep duration was six or fewer hours.
To the authors knowledge, the study is the first in an Asian population to examines the role of sleep duration, melatonin and breast cancer risk. "Our findings provide further indirect support that circadian disruption may be etiologically related to breast cancer and may contribute to the rising incidence of breast cancer in newly affluent societies throughout Asia." they conclude.
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Hormone Melatonin Slows Breast Cancer
Bright Light at Night Linked to Increased Cancer Risk By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Health NewsJuly 14, 2003 (Washington, D.C.) -- The nighttime hormone melatonin puts breast cancer cells to sleep. It also slows breast cancer growth by 70%.
David E. Blask, MD, PhD, of Bassett Research Institute in Cooperstown, N.Y., reported the findings at this week's annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Breast cancers get revved up by a kind of dietary fat called linoleic acid. Melatonin interacts with linoleic acid, so he gave melatonin to mice implanted with human breast cancers.
"This breast cancer rev-up mechanism gets revved down by melatonin," Blask said at a news conference. "Nighttime melatonin is a relevant anticancer signal to human breast cancers. Ninety percent of human breast cancers have specific receptors for this signal."
The hormone seeps from a pea-sized gland in the brain when the lights go out at night. It's the reason you get sleepy when it's dark. Blask and colleagues found that melatonin puts cancer cells to sleep, too.
Blask's team exposed lab mice with human breast cancers to constant light. Tumor growth skyrocketed.
"With constant light, tumors grow seven times faster and soak up incredible amounts of linoleic acid," he says. "During the day, the cancer cells are awake and linoleic acid stimulates their growth. But at night cancer cells go to sleep. When we turn on lights at night for a long time, we suppress melatonin and revert back to the daytime condition."
The finding may explain why nurses who often work the night shift have high rates of breast and colon cancer.
Blask says clinical trials are under way to see whether melatonin supplements can help treat cancer. It may also help in other ways.
"When you take melatonin prior to normal onset of sleep, it will [jump-start the sleep cycle]," he notes. "Many cancer patients suffer from sleep problems. Melatonin may also improve the quality of life in cancer patients by helping them sleep."
Arizona Cancer Center researcher David Alberts, MD, notes that there is a lot of interest in melatonin as a sleep inducer. However, he worries about the safety of over-the-counter melatonin supplements.
"The issue is safe dosing of melatonin," he said at the AACR news conference.
Provided that melatonin supplements actually contain the hormone, Blask isn't worried about overdose.
"In human studies, melatonin has basically no toxicity," he tells WebMD. "Now it takes very little melatonin to stimulate nighttime sleepiness -- on the order of three-tenths of a milligram. But you can't overdose with melatonin. People have taken gram quantities. Its nastiest side effect is sleepines
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In the News
As reported by Science News, January 23, 2009.
Darkness, Melatonin May Stall Breast and Prostate Cancers
New Studies Suggest People Need to Respect the Body's Desire for Nighttime Darkness
By Janet Raloff
To stay healthy, the body needs its zzz's. But independent of slumber, human health also appears to require plenty of darkness - especially at night. Or so suggests a pair of new cancer studies.
One found that among postmenopausal women, the lower the overnight production of melatonin - a brain hormone secreted at night, especially during darkness - the higher the incidence of breast cancer. The second study correlated elevated prostate cancer incidence around the world with places that have the brightest signatures of light in satellite imagery.
Trends seen in both studies bolster animal data indicating that natural nighttime peaks in blood concentrations of melatonin, which tend to occur during sleep, depress the growth of the hormonally sensitive cancers.
Light will depress the body's natural secretion of that hormone, whether someone is awake or asleep.
In 2001, Eva S. Schernhammer of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and her colleagues found an elevated risk of breast cancer among women who worked night shifts. The data, gleaned from participants in the long-running Nurses' Health Study, fit with the idea that the light encountered while working nocturnal hours would have suppressed the women's melatonin production.
Melatonin data were not available for these nurses, however. So to test a melatonin link to cancer, more than 18,500 of the participating nurses were asked to collect their early morning urine on one occasion between 2000 and 2002 for a follow-up analysis.
Between then and 2006, 357 of the women who were not night-shift workers went on to develop breast cancer. Schernhammer and Susan E. Hankinson of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston then correlated melatonin concentrations in the urine from these women with the hormone's overnight excretion by 533 nurses in the study who had remained cancer-free yet matched most of the characteristics of the first group, such as age and history of factors that could affect melatonin or cancer risk - including smoking or drinking.
In the January Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, Schernhammer and Hankinson now report finding a drop in cancer risk as nighttime melatonin values rose. Compared to women at the lowest values, those in the highest showed a roughly two-thirds lower risk of developing breast cancer. Concludes Schernhammer, "We showed the natural variation in nighttime melatonin production predicts breast-cancer risk."
"This is an important confirmatory study" linking melatonin and breast cancer, says David E. Blask of the Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans. "Such epidemiological studies are associative; they can't really determine causation," he notes. But the more such data accumulate, "the stronger the case you can make - especially when you put it together with what we know from experimental studies about melatonin, light at night and breast cancer."
His own studies showed that when scientists injected blood from women with normally high nighttime melatonin concentrations into human breast tumors implanted into rats, the growth of those tumors was suppressed. In contrast, blood from women who had been exposed to light at night - knocking down their melatonin concentrations - fueled the cancers' growth.
Recently, his team has been conducting similar work on rats implanted with human prostate cancers. Blood from animals exposed to light at night fueled the tumor growth while blood rich in melatonin "dramatically decreased the tumor cells' proliferative activity," Blask reports. "We were able to block this effect," he adds, with a drug that blocks the ability of melatonin to dock with its hormone receptor on cells. "So we know that the mechanism works through the melatonin receptor."
Now an ecologic study finds implied support for a melatonin effect on prostate cancer in men. Three Israeli scientists teamed up with Richard Stevens, of the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington, who originated the 1987 hypothesis linking melatonin suppression with cancer. The team analyzed U.S. nighttime global satellite imagery for 164 nations and correlated light emissions in each country - or in subregions of large countries - with incidence data for the three leading male cancers: prostate, lung and colon.
"We found a significant positive association between population exposure to light at night and incidence rates of prostate cancer, but no such association with lung cancer or colon cancer," the team reports in the January Chronobiology International. Areas with the highest amounts of light at night had a prostate cancer rate more than double that in regions with the lowest average nighttime lighting.
"We predicted - and the data now say - that prostate cancer is quite strongly related to light at night," Stevens says. He concludes that people must learn to respect their bodies' need for darkness. That's why he now advocates that people reduce in-home illumination after sundown as much as safety allows, especially in later hours.
Indeed, "With normal [indoor] room lighting at night, melatonin is suppressed in everybody," says Steven W. Lockley of Harvard Medical School in Boston. Onset of the hormone's secretion can be pushed about an hour-and-a-half later than would occur in the absence of light, he adds.
Turn the lights off and melatonin secretion rates will return to normal, he says. But health implications of a chronic, nightly shortfall of melatonin due to spending evenings in well lit rooms remain unknown, he observes, so it's probably best to err on the side of keeping nighttime lighting dim.
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Sometimes Flalady I wonder how YOU sleep with all this research you do!!! But thank you for all your time invested in making us well!!! Best
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Thank you Florida Lady. Of all the risk factors listed for getting bc I think this must the one I crossed. What with night shifts, child who did not sleep well and generally my desire to fit in more than is possible into a day resulted in me never sleeping more than six hours a night. Strangely while, since diagnosis, I have cleaned up my act with food and other lifestyle choices this is the one hardest to make. Somehow there is always something else to be done before I go to bed. Perhaps it is time to start taking melantonin regularly and switching off those lights (including computer monitor).
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Yes, I read last year that nurses working the night shift have a higher risk of bc. I've stayed at the hospital at night and the lights are very bright. I also read to make sure the room you sleep in is very dark at night so your body can produce the melatonin. I'm glad you posted this FloridaLady. I was just telling my brother this last weekend when he was visiting. He made sure to turn the lamp off in my mother's room.
I wish I could sleep better. My daughter has night terrors and my husband snores. Sometimes I sleep in with my mother, but she's not a great sleeper either.
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