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Great study that confirms my recent post about avoiding sunlight being as harmful to health as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. After all, without sunlight, there won't be much vitamin D synthesis, and supplemental intake is not effective for many people due to a variety of factors including obesity, poor digestion, high PTH, etc.

https://xenobg.com/izbyagvaneto-na-slancheva-svetlina-mozhe-da-e-tolkova-vredno-za-zdraveto-kolkoto-pusheneto-na-kutia-tsigari-na-den/

The study below shows that low vitamin D levels are extremely harmful for people diagnosed with melanoma. In other words, both low vitamin D levels and low vitamin D receptor (VDR) expression dramatically increase the risk of melanoma spreading and becoming deadly. Conversely, increasing vitamin D levels or increasing VDR is highly protective and in fact restoring vitamin D levels to the normal range completely blocks melanoma metastasis. In light of these findings, I'm not sure why the authors still conclude that vitamin D alone „won't cure cancer.“ After all, that's exactly what their own study showed, or at least showed that melanoma can be stopped in its tracks, which for most people is tantamount to a cure.

Now, the study below demonstrates that low vitamin D levels are highly detrimental for people diagnosed with melanoma. In other words, both low vitamin D levels or low expression of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) dramatically increased the risk of melanoma spreading and becoming lethal. Conversely, raising vitamin D levels or increasing VDR was strongly protective and in fact restoring vitamin D levels within the normal range fully blocked melanoma from metastasizing. In light of these findings, I am not sure why the authors still conclude that vitamin D on its own “won't treat cancer”. After all, that is exactly what their own study showed, or at the very least has shown that melanoma can be stopped in its tracks which for most people amounts to a cure.

https://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2019/11/05/0008-5472.CAN-18-3927

“...This study reports that vitamin D-VDR signaling bestows a prognostic benefit for melanoma patients by inhibiting Wnt/-catenin signaling and increasing immune cell infiltration. These findings also suggest that activating vitamin D-VDR signaling has the potential to enhance anti-tumor immunity in an adjuvant setting. Notably, our findings suggest that vitamin D deficiency (<25nmol/L) is deleterious for melanoma survival rather than that high levels are protective. As melanoma is causally related to intense sun burn (59), sun avoidance is frequently recommended to patients in follow up. Our data suggest a causal relationship between reduced vitamin D-VDR signaling and therefore, as sun exposure is the dominant vitamin D source in most populations, simultaneous avoidance of vitamin D deficiency is important health advice. ”

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-11-vitamin-d-dials-aggression-melanoma.html

“...They also discovered that tumours with lower VDR levels also had a higher activity of genes linked to cancer growth and spread, especially those controlling the Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway, which helps to modulate a variety of biological processes within the cell, such as its growth. In mice, the researchers found that increasing the amount of VDR on the melanoma cells reduced activity of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, and slowed down the growth of the melanoma cells. They also found that the cancer was less likely to spread to their lungs. Professor Newton-Bishop said. melanoma cells by reducing activity of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway. This new puzzle piece will help us better understand how melanoma grows and spreads, and hopefully find new targets to control it. “But what's really intriguing, is that we can now see how vitamin D might help the immune system fight cancer. We know when the Wnt/β-catenin pathway is active in melanoma, it can dampen down the immune response causing fewer immune cells to reach the inside of the tumour, where they could potentially fight the cancer better. “Although vitamin D on its own won't treat cancer, we could take insights from the way it works to boost the effects of immunotherapy, which uses the immune system to find and attack cancer cells.”

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