[Home]
[Full version]
Study Finds No Link Between Working The Night Shift And An Increased Risk Of Cancer
Aug 22 ,Medicine & Health
Working the night shift doesn't appear to increase the risk of developing cancer, suggests the findings of a new study of Swedish workers.
Recent studies – and corresponding news headlines – have found that regularly working the night shift may increase the risk of developing breast, prostate and colon cancers. Some researchers say that the connection could be due to a decrease in the production of the hormone melatonin, as some animal experiments suggest that the hormone may have anti-cancer properties.
Our bodies produce their highest levels of melatonin at night, during sleep, but exposure to light at night suppresses melatonin production, said Judith Schwartzbaum, the study's lead author and an associate professor of epidemiology at Ohio State University.
“However, the effects of melatonin on cancer development in humans are not well understood,” she said.
Schwartzbaum and her colleagues found no link between working the night shift and the risk of developing any kind of cancer. They came to this conclusion after analyzing nearly 20 years' worth of data that compared people who reported jobs that required working during the day to people who said they had jobs that required night shift work.
The findings appear in a forthcoming issue of the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health. Schwartzbaum conducted the study with researchers from the Institute for Environmental Medicine, located at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden.
The study included all Swedish citizens who worked at least 20 hours a week in 1970, and who were included in both the 1960 and 1970 population censuses – a total of about 3.2 million people. The researchers gathered job information from each census.
They categorized the occupations according to the percentage of people who reported shift work: more than 70 percent, more than 40 percent, less than 30 percent, and no employees reporting shift work.
The researchers collected information on the people from 1971 through 1989 or until a worker was diagnosed with cancer or died.
Information about the cause of death came from the Swedish Cause of Death Registry. All cases of cancer that occurred within the study's time frame were identified from the national Swedish Cancer Registry. Schwartzbaum said that all Swedish physicians who care for cancer patients must notify the national cancer registry when a patient is diagnosed with the disease.
To determine the percentage of night-shift workers in each job category included in the census, the researchers used additional occupational information from the Swedish Survey of Living Conditions conducted from 1977 through 1981. During this five-year stretch more than 46,000 workers were personally interviewed about their jobs and work schedules, including what hours during the day they worked. Schwartzbaum and her colleagues applied this information to the overall study group.
About 200,000 men and 100,000 women in the study developed cancer. There were roughly 2.1 million working men included in the census data, and about 1.1 million working women.
In the researchers' main analysis, participants were categorized as either exposed or not exposed to shift work according to their occupation in 1970. The researchers followed both groups for 19 years.
In separate analyses, the researchers took the duration of night-shift exposure into account. They defined “exposure” as working in a job that met the criteria for night-shift work in both the 1960 and 1970 censuses.
“We identified occupations where many employees worked during hours that could affect the production of melatonin,” Schwartzbaum said.
Schwartzbaum and her colleagues defined shift work as work that had a rotating schedule with three or more possible shifts per day, or where the schedule included working between 1 and 4 a.m., which the researchers defined as working at night.
A very small percentage of the working population included in this study reported having jobs that met the definition of shift work (just 4 percent of men and 0.4 percent of women.)
For men, the main night-shift occupations included work in the paper manufacturing industry, working as a furnace operator and working as firefighters, policemen or train operators. The occupations of women who worked at night primarily included work as crane or hoist operators, delivery agents in the paper and publishing industries, or working as midwives.
The final results showed no relationship between shift work and an increased risk of developing prostate, colon or breast cancers or nearly any other kind of cancer, regardless of how much the occupation depended upon shift work.
Schwartzbaum points out that the current results don't agree with a number of recently published studies, two of which found an increased risk of prostate cancer among rotating shift workers, and another half-dozen studies that suggested an increase in breast cancer risk among female shift workers.
“Many of these studies included very specific worker populations,” she said. “For example, studies of female flight attendants have found an increased risk of breast cancer and also a higher-than-expected risk for developing malignant melanoma.
“But airline workers differ from other shift workers due to their increased exposure to cosmic and solar radiation,” Schwartzbaum continued. “So it's tough to tease out what exactly may contribute to their elevated risk of cancer.”
What's needed, Schwartzbaum said, are large-scale international studies to help tease out the relationship between shift work and the risk of developing cancer.
“It seems like 3 million workers ought to be enough to get a firm idea of the risk, but it isn't, especially considering the relatively low percentage of jobs that require shift work,” Schwartzbaum said. “We need studies that include data from multiple countries.”
Source: Ohio State University
Related stories:
Experimental agent blocks prostate cancer in animal study
An experimental drug has blocked the progression of prostate cancer in an animal model with an aggressive form of the disease, new research shows. The agent, OSU-HDAC42, belongs to a new class of drugs called histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, compounds designed to reactivate genes that normally protect against cancer but are turned off by the cancer process.
Nightime light linked to cancer
An Israeli study said women who live in well-lighted neighborhoods are more likely to develop breast cancer than those who live in darker areas.
Researcher examines link between cancer, Down syndrome
There’s new hope for breast cancer research, and it’s coming from a very unlikely place. Researchers at the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences recently published articles in the journals Molecular and Cellular Biology and Carcinogenesis indicating that a protein long suspected to play a role in Down Syndrome may also contribute to treating this devastating disease.
Sex hormones unrelated to prostate cancer risk
Sex hormones circulating in the blood do not appear to be associated with prostate cancer risk, according to data from 18 prior studies. The analysis will be published online January 29 in the
Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Study of malaria parasite in patient blood finds distinct physiological states
The malaria parasite has been studied for decades, but surprisingly, little is known about how it behaves in humans to cause disease. In a groundbreaking study published November 28 in the advance online edition of
Nature, an international research team has for the first time measured which of the parasite's genes are turned on or off during actual infection in humans, not in cell cultures, unearthing surprising behaviors and opening a window on the most critical aspects of parasite biology.
New report shows how our diet must change to cut cancer risk
A new report published this week by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) will show how much our diet needs to change if we are to reduce the risk of cancer.
Researchers say lack of sleep doubles risk of death... but so can too much sleep
Researchers from the University of Warwick, and University College London, have found that lack of sleep can more than double the risk of death from cardiovascular disease. However they have also found that point comes when too much sleep can also more than double the risk of death.
Americans still not eating enough fruits and vegetables
"Eat your vegetables" has been heard at the dinner tables of America for a long time. Has the message gotten through? Since 1990 the Dietary Guidelines for Americans has recommended consuming at least two servings of fruits and three servings of vegetables daily. However, two studies published in the April issue of the
American Journal of Preventive Medicine clearly show that Americans are not meeting the mark. This is a serious public health concern because consuming a diet high in fruits and vegetables is associated with decreased risk of obesity and certain chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and some cancers.
[Home]
[Full version]