Smoking may damage immunity of skin cancer patients: Study
Smoking
may damage the immune response against melanoma and limit patients'
survival chances, according to a new study.
Melanoma
patients with a history of smoking cigarettes are 40 per cent less
likely to survive their skin
cancer than people who have never smoked within a
decade after their diagnosis, according to the study, published in
the journal Cancer Research.
Other
researchers have reported that smoking have adverse effects on the
immune system, but it is not yet known which chemicals are
responsible for this.
"The
immune system is like an orchestra, with multiple pieces. This
research suggests that smoking might disrupt how it works together in
tune, allowing the musicians to continue playing but possibly in a
more disorganised way," said lead researcher Julia
Newton-Bishop, Professor at the University of Leeds.
Smoking
could directly affect how smokers' bodies deal with the melanoma
cancer cells, said the researchers.
"Overall,
these results show that smoking could limit the chances of melanoma
patients' survival so it's especially important that they are given
all the support possible to give up smoking for good," said
Julie Sharp, head at Cancer Research UK in Britain.
This
is the reason why people should try to give up smoking, particularly
those who have been diagnosed with malignant melanoma, suggested the
researchers. Read
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