Vitamin B3 Supplements May Help Stop Skin Cancer From Coming Back

For the past decade, healthcare providers have recommended that people who’ve had skin cancer take a form of vitamin B3 called nicotinamide, following a 2015 study that showed the supplement could lower the risk of new skin cancers.

New research affirms these findings with a much larger study group.

The new investigation found an “overall benefit for nicotinamide used to prevent skin cancer,” says study author Lee Wheless, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of dermatology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and a staff physician at the Tennessee Valley Health System Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Some people getting nicotinamide especially benefited. “We were able to stratify patients by the number of prior skin cancers, finding that there was a much greater risk reduction, of more than 50 percent, when nicotinamide was started after the first skin cancer, compared to starting later after patients had developed multiple skin cancers,” Dr. Wheless says.

Study Saw Overall Risk of Skin Cancer Recurrence Drop by 14 Percent

The retrospective cohort study used electronic health record data from the Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse over a 25-year period. Nearly 34,000 patients who’d had skin cancer were included.

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