Vitamin B May Help Prevent Some Skin Cancers, University of Sydney Study

A simple daily vitamin may help prevent the most common types of skin cancer in people at high risk of the disease, according to new research from Australia.

A study conducted at the University of Sydney found that nicotinamide, a form of vitamin B3, reduced by 23 percent the incidence of new, non-melanoma skin cancers in people who had at least two of the cancers in the previous five years. The study compared nicotinamide taken as a pill twice daily to a placebo.

The findings may offer a way to reduce the health burden and cost of skin cancer, the most common form of the disease in fair-skinned people, according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology. The society released the study on Wednesday ahead of its annual meeting at the end of this month.

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