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- Barrett, Jennifer H1
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- Cooke, Marcus S1
- Cust, Anne E1
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- Kanetsky, Peter A1
- Kift, Richard1
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Melanoma
3 Results
- Original Article Clinical ResearchOpen Archive
Support for the Safe Use of Zinc Oxide Nanoparticle Sunscreens: Lack of Skin Penetration or Cellular Toxicity after Repeated Application in Volunteers
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 139Issue 2p308–315Published online: November 15, 2018- Yousuf H. Mohammed
- Amy Holmes
- Isha N. Haridass
- Washington Y. Sanchez
- Hauke Studier
- Jeffrey E. Grice
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 90Zinc oxide is a widely used broad-spectrum sunscreen, but concerns have been raised about the safety of its nanoparticle (NP) form. We studied the safety of repeated application of agglomerated zinc oxide (ZnO) NPs applied to human volunteers over 5 days by assessing the skin penetration of intact ZnO-NPs and zinc ions and measuring local skin toxicity. Multiphoton tomography with fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy was used to directly visualize ZnO-NP skin penetration and viable epidermal metabolic changes in human volunteers. - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Access
Assessing the Incremental Contribution of Common Genomic Variants to Melanoma Risk Prediction in Two Population-Based Studies
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 138Issue 12p2617–2624Published online: June 8, 2018- Anne E. Cust
- Martin Drummond
- Peter A. Kanetsky
- Australian Melanoma Family Study Investigators
- Leeds Case-Control Study Investigators
- Alisa M. Goldstein
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 34It is unclear to what degree genomic and traditional (phenotypic and environmental) risk factors overlap in their prediction of melanoma risk. We evaluated the incremental contribution of common genomic variants (in pigmentation, nevus, and other pathways) and their overlap with traditional risk factors, using data from two population-based case-control studies from Australia (n = 1,035) and the United Kingdom (n = 1,460) that used the same questionnaires. Polygenic risk scores were derived from 21 gene regions associated with melanoma and odds ratios from published meta-analyses. - Original Article PhotobiologyOpen Access
Fractional Sunburn Threshold UVR Doses Generate Equivalent Vitamin D and DNA Damage in Skin Types I–VI but with Epidermal DNA Damage Gradient Correlated to Skin Darkness
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 138Issue 10p2244–2252Published online: May 3, 2018- Barbara B. Shih
- Mark D. Farrar
- Marcus S. Cooke
- Joanne Osman
- Abigail K. Langton
- Richard Kift
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 37Public health guidance recommends limiting sun exposure to sub-sunburn levels, but it is unknown whether these can gain vitamin D (for musculoskeletal health) while avoiding epidermal DNA damage (initiates skin cancer). Well-characterized healthy humans of all skin types (I–VI, lightest to darkest skin) were exposed to a low-dose series of solar simulated UVR of 20%–80% their individual sunburn threshold dose (minimal erythema dose). Significant UVR dose responses were seen for serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and whole epidermal cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs), with as little as 0.2 minimal erythema dose concurrently producing 25-hydroxyvitamin D and CPD.