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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Light-at-night, circadian disruption and breast cancer: assessment of existing evidence

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TLDR
If a consensus eventually emerges that LAN does increase risk, then the mechanisms for the effect are important to elucidate for intervention and mitigation and will provide for the development of lighting technologies at home and at work that minimize circadian disruption, while maintaining visual efficiency and aesthetics.
Abstract
Background Breast cancer incidence is increasing globally for largely unknown reasons. The possibility that a portion of the breast cancer burden might be explained by the introduction and increasing use of electricity to light the night was suggested >20 years ago. Methods The theory is based on nocturnal light-induced disruption of circadian rhythms, notably reduction of melatonin synthesis. It has formed the basis for a series of predictions including that non-day shift work would increase risk, blind women would be at lower risk, long sleep duration would lower risk and community nighttime light level would co-distribute with breast cancer incidence on the population level. Results Accumulation of epidemiological evidence has accelerated in recent years, reflected in an International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classification of shift work as a probable human carcinogen (2A). There is also a strong rodent model in support of the light-at-night (LAN) idea. Conclusion If a consensus eventually emerges that LAN does increase risk, then the mechanisms for the effect are important to elucidate for intervention and mitigation. The basic understanding of phototransduction for the circadian system, and of the molecular genetics of circadian rhythm generation are both advancing rapidly, and will provide for the development of lighting technologies at home and at work that minimize circadian disruption, while maintaining visual efficiency and aesthetics. In the interim, there are strategies now available to reduce the potential for circadian disruption, which include extending the daily dark period, appreciate nocturnal awakening in the dark, using dim red light for nighttime necessities, and unless recommended by a physician, not taking melatonin tablets.

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Book ChapterDOI

How Light Resets Circadian Clocks

TL;DR: This chapter deals with circadian (daily) clocks and the role light plays in synchronizing them with the 24 h cycles in the environment and describes how the circadian system of several organisms is synchronized by light.

Occupational cosmic radiation exposure and cancer in airline cabin crew

Katja Kojo
TL;DR: Two separate retrospective exposure assessment methods for occupational exposure to cosmic radiation based on survey on flight histories and based on company flight timetables are developed to provide improved means for individual cosmic radiation exposure assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Invited Commentary: Validity of Case-Control Studies of Sleep Duration and Breast Cancer

TL;DR: The light-at-night theory of breast cancer causation states that a portion of the high breast cancer risk in the industrialized world and in the developing word is due to the introduction and increasing use of electricity to light the night.
References
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TL;DR: It is shown that retinal ganglion cells innervating the SCN are intrinsically photosensitive, and depolarized in response to light even when all synaptic input from rods and cones was blocked.
Journal ArticleDOI

Light Suppresses Melatonin Secretion in Humans

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Journal ArticleDOI

Action Spectrum for Melatonin Regulation in Humans: Evidence for a Novel Circadian Photoreceptor

TL;DR: The results suggest that, in humans, a single photopigment may be primarily responsible for melatonin suppression, and its peak absorbance appears to be distinct from that of rod and cone cellphotopigments for vision.
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