Marathon Runners Face Skin Cancer Risk

By CARLA K. JOHNSON
The Associated Press
Tuesday, November 21, 2006; 9:04 PM

CHICAGO -- White marathon runners seem to face an increased risk of skin cancer because of long sun exposure, Austrian researchers report.

The research team, all dermatologists at the Medical University of Graz, Austria, grew interested because they had treated eight ultramarathon runners with malignant skin cancer over a 10-year period.


The men's winner of the 13th annual Philadelphia Marathon Hosea Kimutai of Kenya crosses the finish line on the Ben Franklin Parkway, Sunday Nov. 19, 2006, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Bradley C Bower)
The men's winner of the 13th annual Philadelphia Marathon Hosea Kimutai of Kenya crosses the finish line on the Ben Franklin Parkway, Sunday Nov. 19, 2006, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Bradley C Bower) (Bradley C Bower - AP)

"...We were concerned by this observation because all of us are enthusiastic runners and two of us ... regularly participate in marathons," the authors write in Monday's Archives of Dermatology.

They recruited 210 marathon runners for their study and matched them for age and sex with 210 other people they signed up at five recreation centers in Austria. All 420 people were screened by a dermatologist.

The marathon runners had more abnormal moles and lesions, and 24 were referred for surgical treatment, while there were 14 treatment referrals among the non-marathoners.

The highest rate of referral for treatment, 19 percent, was among the marathoners who trained the most, more than 43.5 miles per week.

The results of the marathoners who were referred for treatment were not available. None of the lesions in either group looked like malignant melanoma, a more serious but less common form of skin cancer. The lesions appeared to be non-melanoma cancers, the most common type of skin cancer.

Since the research was on white marathoners, it's unclear if the findings would apply to blacks, who are less prone to skin cancer than whites.

"Personally, I recommend sunscreen use for everybody," said Dr. Scott B. Phillips, a Chicago dermatologist.

Only 56 percent of the runners reported wearing sunscreen regularly.

Study co-author Dr. Christina Ambros-Rudolph said most marathoners are unaware of the risk to their skin, and even the running researchers found it "good to be reminded to keep wearing the right gear and use sunscreen."

Runners can lower their risk by training during morning or evening hours and wearing water-resistant sunscreen, said Phillips, who has run 37 marathons and three Ironman triathlons, an endurance event that includes swimming, cycling and running.


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