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While sun exposure for young adults played some role, too, the association with BRAF disappeared at age 30.
But that isn't a license for adults to sunbathe: Another melanoma subtype, characterized by mutations in a gene called NRAS, is strongly linked to UV exposure by age 50, the study found.
Here's the problem: Until recently, sunscreens have filtered out mostly UVB rays that cause sunburns, not UVA rays, meaning people who depended only on sunscreen to prevent skin cancer may have gotten a false sense of security.
Today, many sunscreens promise "broad-spectrum" protection against UVA rays, too. But the government doesn't yet have testing requirements in place to prove that UVA protection.
The term broad-spectrum "means nothing. Anybody can make that claim," says a frustrated Dr. Darrell Rigel of New York University, a past president of the American Academy of Dermatology, which has long pushed to change that.
The soon-to-come FDA proposal will keep the SPF, or "sun protection factor," ratings on sunscreen bottles -- referring only to UVB protection -- but add a UVA rating, too, says Shuren.
Until then, dermatologist Rigel has some advice:
Use enough sunscreen. An adult needs the equivalent of a full shot glass, and a young child a good tablespoon-full. Most people put on too thin a coat to get good UVB coverage, much less whatever UVA protection a brand might offer.
While official recommendations say to wear at least an SPF-15 sunscreen daily, a super-high SPF will counter some of the thin-coat problem.
Products with the ingredient Helioplex -- a more sun-stable mix of the sunscreen ingredients avobenzone and oxybenzone -- seem to provide longer-lasting UVA protection, although they can be more expensive. Another certified anti-UVA ingredient, Mexoryl, currently is sold only in sunscreen-containing moisturizer in the U.S.; it has long been sold in Europe.
Apply sunscreen a half-hour before going outside. It takes that long to start working.
And limit exposure during the peak UV hours of 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
On the Net:
[Associated Press;
article by Lauran Neergaard, AP medical writer
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