Photocarcinogen


A photocarcinogen is a substance which causes cancer when an organism is exposed to it, then illuminated. Many chemicals that are not carcinogenic can be photocarcinogenic when combined with exposure to light, especially UV. This can easily be understood from a photochemical perspective: The reactivity of a chemical substance itself might be low, but after illumination it transitions to an excited state, which is chemically much more reactive and therefore potentially harmful to biological tissue and DNA. Light can also split photocarcinogens, releasing free radicals, whose unpaired electrons cause them to be extremely reactive.
Determination of photocarcinogenicity can be accomplished using different techniques, including epidemiological studies and in-vivo studies. In one in-vivo technique, hairless mice are exposed to suspected photocarcinogens, and are then exposed to different wavelengths of light, ranging from visible to UV-B. Tumor incidence is compared to control mice that have not been exposed to the drug or chemical being tested.
Melanin is not a photocarcinogen, because it dissipates the excitation energy into small amounts of heat. Oxybenzone is suspected owing to its skin penetrating qualities and its production of free radicals. One medication that has been proven to be photocarcinogenic is psoralen. This drug is used in photodynamic therapy for many inflammatory skin conditions, where the drug is combined with skin exposure to UV light. Epidemiological studies dating back to the 1970s have shown a strong association between psoralen treatment and skin cancer incidence 5 to 15 years afterwards.