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Risk Assessment of UVB Effects on Resistance to Infectious Diseases
Authors:Johan Garssen  Wim Goettsch  Frank de Gruijl  Henk Van Loveren
Institution:National Institute of Public Health and Enviroment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands;University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract:The aim of this study was to develop a qunatitiative risk assessment of lowered resistance to Infections in humans due to (solar) ultraviolet B (UVB) exposure. We followed the steps for risk assessment as defined by the U. S. National Academy of Sciences: (1) hazard identification, (2) dose-response assessment, (3) exposure assessment, and (4) risk characterization. For step 1, the suppressory effects of UVB radiation on the immune system have been reviewed, suplemented with new data, and analyzed. Experiments on UV-induced immunosuppression cannot be performed with humans for ethical reasons, but herpes simplex virus infection appears to be the human paradigm. Thus, UVB radiation appears to be a potential hazard to immunologic functions, Step 2 is crucial, but dose-response relationships for infections have never been measured in humans. We used our earlier doseresponse rat data for suppression of lymphocyte stimulation and computed that the UVB dose resulting in a 50% reduction of lymphocyte stimulation by Listeria monocytogenes is 6.800 J/m2. Using mixed skin lymphocyte response assays we found that humans are 3.8 times less sensitive than rats (interspeices variation (IEVI). To account for the 2.5 percentile of most susceptible individuals in a population, and additional factor (intraspecies varations (IAV) was introduced (0.5 for humans). Using these data, we computed that 13.100 J/m2 of UVB radiation emitted by FS40 lamps would suppress 50% of the proliferative response of lymphocytes to L. monocytogenes in most sensitive skin type 2 humans. In step 3, we assumed the action spectrum for the responses analyzed by us as indentical to an action spectrum for suppression of contact hypersensitivity that is available in the literature. This led us to step 4, where we calculated that approximately 100 min of solar exposure at around noon in Italy or Spain would suppress the resistance to infections by L. monocytogenes in the most sensitive humans.
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