Tanning beds and sunbathing may be associated with an increased risk of endometriosis

Tanning beds and sunbathing not only increase a woman’s chances of developing malignant melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, but may also be linked to a greater risk of developing endometriosis, according to new research.

A study of over 116,000 women in the USA, published in Human Reproduction [1], one of the world’s leading reproductive medicine journals, has found that the risk of endometriosis increased the more young women used tanning beds, got sunburnt or used sunscreen during their teenage and young adulthood years.

However, the study also found that women living in parts of the country with high levels of ultraviolet light throughout the year, such as southern parts of the US, were less likely to be diagnosed with the painful condition, in which tissue similar to the lining of the womb starts to grow in other places like the ovaries and fallopian tubes.

Professor Leslie Farland, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona College of Public Health (USA), who led the research, said: “Prior research into the long-term health consequences of endometriosis has suggested that women with endometriosis are at greater risk of melanoma. While the exact mechanisms underlying the association between endometriosis and melanoma are not known, several studies have found a greater risk of endometriosis in women who are sensitive to sunlight, don’t tan easily and have red hair, light eyes, freckling or a high number of moles. These associations may reflect a common genetic background between endometriosis and melanoma, or an underlying association between sun exposure and risk of endometriosis.”

Prof. Farland and her colleagues at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine (USA), and the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM), Université Paris-Saclay, Villejuif (France), studied 116,429 women who joined the US Nurses’ Health Study II in 1989 when they were aged between 25 and 42 years. Every two years, up until June 2015, the participants completed questionnaires that asked about their medical history and their exposure to risk factors for several chronic diseases. When they joined the study in 1989, the participants were asked about their tendency to sunburn, the number of moles on their legs, and their number of severe sunburns between the ages of 15 and 20 years. In 1993 they provided information on their use of sunscreens and in 2005 they reported on their use of tanning beds during their teenage and early adult years and between the ages of 25-35 years.

From 1993 onwards, the participants were also asked whether they had endometriosis, diagnosed by laparoscopy, which is the gold standard for correctly diagnosing the condition. Their home addresses were updated every two years and were linked with data on annual ambient ultraviolet A and ultraviolet B light for the area.

The researchers excluded women from their analysis who reported having endometriosis, or who had been diagnosed with cancer (including non-melanoma skin cancer) at the time they joined the study. They also restricted the analyses to white women, given known racial and ethnic disparities in endometriosis diagnosis and differences in the influence of UVA and UVB light for different races.

Among the 95,080 women included in the analyses, there were 4,791 cases of endometriosis diagnosed with laparoscopy over the follow-up period.

After adjusting their analyses to take account of factors that might affect the results, the researchers found that compared to women who never used tanning beds, those who used them six or more times a year when they were teenagers and young adults had a 19% increased risk of endometriosis. If they used them six or more times a year between the ages of 25-35, they had a 24% increased risk, and if they used tanning beds three or more times a year throughout both periods of their lives, they had a 30% increased risk of endometriosis.

This means that around five women in every 100 might develop endometriosis over an average follow-up period of nearly 14 years per person if they had never used tanning beds as teenagers, young adults or between the ages of 25-35, but nearly seven women in 100 would develop it if they used tanning beds more than three times a year.

A history of five or more sunburns between the ages of 15-20 was associated with a 12% increased risk of endometriosis compared to women who were never sunburnt. Compared to those who never used sunscreen, which the researchers used as an indicator of time spent sunbathing or taking part in other, outdoor recreational activities, those who used it all the time had a 10% increased risk of endometriosis. The absolute risk of developing endometriosis among women who were sunburnt five or more times a year between the ages of 15-20 was too small to show a difference between the two groups.

Women who lived in the sunniest parts of the country at birth, at age 15 and at 30, had a 19%, 21% and 10% reduced risk of endometriosis respectively compared to women living in parts of the US with the least annual sunshine. This means that four women in 100 might develop endometriosis if they lived in parts of the country with the highest UV levels at the age of 15 compared to nearly six in 100 if they lived parts of the country with the lowest UV levels.

Professor Stacey Missmer, a professor at Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and co-lead author of the study, said: “We know very little about ways to modify behaviour in order to reduce risk of developing endometriosis. There is still a lot we don’t understand about the relationship between recreational and residential sun exposure and risk of endometriosis. However, our findings suggest that avoiding excessive recreational sun exposure and tanning beds may reduce your endometriosis risk.”

Endometriosis is estimated to affect around 10% of women. This is the first prospective study of the association between sun exposure and endometriosis, and the researchers say that their findings need to be investigated further in other settings and with other groups of women.

“Over the past 30 years, more people have been diagnosed with skin cancer than all other cancers combined,” said Prof. Farland. “From a public health perspective, we already know women should avoid tanning beds to reduce their risk of melanoma. This study reinforces the advice to avoid using tanning beds and suggests that there may be an additional benefit of reducing the risk of endometriosis. Women should follow the health advice never to use tanning beds, to avoid being sunburnt, and to protect your skin from exposure to the sun by covering up, seeking the shade, and by using a broad spectrum UVA/UVB sunscreen.”

The mechanisms between exposure to the sun and tanning beds and risk of endometriosis are not clear and, as the study is observational, it cannot show that these exposures cause the increased risk of endometriosis. The authors point out that high intensity exposure to UV is associated with DNA damage, cell damage, inflammation and the risk of melanoma, and that tanning beds, in particular, emit predominantly UVA light, which has been associated with an increased risk of cell damage and weakened immune responses. All of these have been linked to the risk of endometriosis. In contrast, if women live in sunnier parts of the world, they are exposed to more UVB light, which prompts the production of vitamin D in the skin; vitamin D has been shown to supress inflammation and boost immunity.

Other limitations of the study include that women may not have recalled their sun exposure accurately, particularly when they were younger; some may have been diagnosed with endometriosis before reporting on their recreational exposure in 2005; the women in the Nurses’ Health Study II are not a random sample of US women; and the researchers’ analysis was restricted to white women and so it may not be possible to extrapolate the results to women of other skin colours and ethnicities.

Editor-in-chief of Human Reproduction, Dr Nils Lambalk, from the Department of Reproductive Medicine, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), commented: “This study sheds an intriguing light on the link between exposure to UV and endometriosis. A psychological aspect that could be researched further is whether there might be a relationship between a woman’s self-image and having endometriosis. For instance, if you suffer from endometriosis does this encourage you to seek ways of feeling and looking ‘better’ or ‘healthier’ through tanning? Or are women who are not satisfied with the way they look also more prone to endometriosis?”

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[1] “Recreational and residential sun exposure and risk of endometriosis: a prospective cohort study”, by Leslie V. Farland et al. Human Reproduction journal. doi:10.1093/humrep/deaa280

Human Reproduction is a monthly journal of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) and is one of the top three journals in the world in the field of reproductive biology, obstetrics and gynaecology. It is published by Oxford Journals, a division of Oxford University Press.
Please acknowledge Human Reproduction as a source in any articles.