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Pale people may need more vitamin D

Christina Hendricks arrives at the 67th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton on January 17, 2010 in Beverly Hills, California. UPI /Jim Ruymen
Christina Hendricks arrives at the 67th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton on January 17, 2010 in Beverly Hills, California. UPI /Jim Ruymen | License Photo

LEEDS, England, Oct. 5 (UPI) -- People with very pale skin, who need to avoid sunburn, may not get enough vitamin D from sunlight and may need to take supplements, researchers in Britain say.

Lead author Julia Newton-Bishop of the Cancer Research U.K. Centre at the University of Leeds also suggested melanoma patients might also need vitamin D supplements as well.

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The study, published in Cancer Causes and Control, defined the optimal amount of vitamin D required by the body as at least 60 nanomoles per liter. However, there is no current universally agreed standard definition of an optimal level of vitamin D, Newton-Bishop said.

Researchers chose 60nmol/L as the optimal vitamin D level in part because there is evidence that levels lower than this may be linked to greater risk of heart disease and poorer survival from breast cancer, Newton-Bishop said.

"Fair-skinned individuals who burn easily are not able to make enough vitamin D from sunlight and so may need to take vitamin D supplements," Newton-Bishop said in a statement. "This should be considered for fair-skinned people living in a mild climate like Britain and melanoma patients in particular."

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The researchers took the vitamin D levels of some 1,200 people and found that about 730 people had a sub-optimal level and those with fair-skin had significantly lower levels.

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