Cancers (Jan 2022)

Slip versus Slop: A Head-to-Head Comparison of UV-Protective Clothing to Sunscreen

  • Elizabeth G. Berry,
  • Joshua Bezecny,
  • Michael Acton,
  • Taylor P. Sulmonetti,
  • David M. Anderson,
  • Haskell W. Beckham,
  • Rebecca A. Durr,
  • Takahiro Chiba,
  • Jennifer Beem,
  • Douglas E. Brash,
  • Rajan Kulkarni,
  • Pamela B. Cassidy,
  • Sancy A. Leachman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14030542
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 542

Abstract

Read online

Ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure is the most important modifiable risk factor for skin cancer development. Although sunscreen and sun-protective clothing are essential tools to minimize UVR exposure, few studies have compared the two modalities head-to-head. This study evaluates the UV-protective capacity of four modern, sun-protective textiles and two broad-spectrum, organic sunscreens (SPF 30 and 50). Sun Protection Factor (SPF), Ultraviolet Protection Factor (UPF), Critical Wavelength (CW), and % UVA- and % UVB-blocking were measured for each fabric. UPF, CW, % UVA- and % UVB-blocking were measured for each sunscreen at 2 mg/cm2 (recommended areal density) and 1 mg/cm2 (simulating real-world consumer application). The four textiles provided superior UVR protection when compared to the two sunscreens tested. All fabrics blocked erythemogenic UVR better than the sunscreens, as measured by SPF, UPF, and % UVB-blocking. Each fabric was superior to the sunscreens in blocking full-spectrum UVR, as measured by CW and % UVA-blocking. Our data demonstrate the limitations of sunscreen and UV-protective clothing labeling and suggest the combination of SPF or UPF with % UVA-blocking may provide more suitable measures for broad-spectrum protection. While sunscreen remains an important photoprotective modality (especially for sites where clothing is impractical), these data suggest that clothing should be considered the cornerstone of UV protection.

Keywords