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Losing 11
pounds lowers prostate cancer risk
STUDY:
MEN WHO LOST WEIGHT CUT ODDS OF GETTING AGGRESSIVE FORM OF DISEASE
ATLANTA -
Here's another reason for men to avoid packing on extra pounds over
the holidays: A new study has found that losing weight reduces
the risk of an aggressive form of prostate cancer.
After tracking
the weight of nearly 70,000 men between 1982 and 1992,
researchers from the American Cancer Society and the Duke
University Prostate Center found that men who lost more than
11 pounds had a lower risk for aggressive prostate cancer than
men whose weight remained the same over a decade.
Previous
studies have found that obese men have a higher risk of developing
aggressive prostate cancer. This study appears to be the first
to indicate that recent weight loss can decrease that risk.
In the study
reported this month in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers &
Prevention, researchers
analyzed the height and weight of the men in 1982 and 1992
and every three years after that until 2003. At that
time, more than 5,200 of the men -- more than 7 percent -- had
prostate cancer.
Among those
cases, about one in eight had a form of cancer that was aggressive but
had not spread to other areas of the body. The study's major
finding focused on those aggressive cases, with researchers
concluding that those who lost 11 or more pounds were 42
percent less likely to develop that form of prostate cancer
than those whose weight remained the same.
"Whether it's
exactly 40 percent, we don't know, but they lower their risk when they
lose 11-plus pounds. We feel confident, at least in this
population, that was real," said lead researcher Dr. Carmen
Rodriguez.
More than
seven times as many men whose weight remained the same
developed aggressive prostate cancer compared to those who
lost 11 or more pounds.
"No
significant associations" were found regarding the effect of weight
gain or loss on the most severe forms of prostate cancer,
those that spread throughout the body, the study said.
The number
studied was small, the researchers acknowledged, because fewer
than 15,000 men lost weight over the time period, and only
1,000 of those developed some form of prostate cancer.
The 69,991
participants were part of a bigger cancer society study of 1.2
million Americans that began in 1982.
Rodriguez said
men should avoid putting on extra weight as they get older.
"The main
message for men is to not get overweight. If they are overweight,
that's another reason to try to lose weight, just to decrease
the risk for prostate cancer," said Rodriguez, who works for
the Atlanta-based cancer society.
Other than
skin cancer, prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer for
men, and about one in six will get it during his lifetime. It
is the second leading cause of cancer death for U.S. men.
The study is
considered the first of its kind to examine the role of weight change
in the development of prostate cancer, said Dr. Ronald Ennis,
director of radiation oncology at St. Luke's-Roosevelt
Hospital Center in New York, who was not involved in the study.
"This is one
of the best studies" examining the role of weight on prostate cancer,
Ennis said. "It does seem to be true that if you are
overweight, you are at risk of getting more aggressive forms
of prostate cancer and if you lose weight, you can decrease
the risk."
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