By Penny Timms
New evidence suggests a possible link between high temperatures and a person’s risk of developing skin cancer.
Scientists have found that skin cells exposed to UV light and a temperature of 39 degrees Celsius show significant DNA damage, which increases a person’s risk of illness.
They say the findings could be of particular importance to people who work outdoors, in warm climates.
Dr Leslie Calapre, lead researcher from Edith Cowan University’s melanoma research group based in Western Australia, said the findings were mostly related to the cells that “comprises the upper… layers of the skin”.
“And these cancers that can arise from squamous cell carcinomas and basal cell carcinomas.”
Squamous cells are flat cells in the outer part of the epidermis that are constantly shed as new ones form. The cells in these cancers look like abnormal versions of the squamous cells seen in the outer layers of the skin.
Basal cell are cells that constantly divide to form new ones to replace the squamous cells that wear off the skin’s surface. Basal cell carcinomas is the most common type of skin cancer.
‘Never thought of heat as a factor’
For the study, Dr Calapre compared two samples of human skin cells that were each exposed to UV light, but one was kept at 37 degrees Celsius and the other at 39.
And even that small difference showed that cells kept at the warmer temperature were more likely to develop skin cancer.
“We never thought of heat as, even though present, a factor in any skin cancer-related diseases,” she said.