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Lean Body Mass
May Protect Against Prostate Cancer
NEW YORK
(Reuters Health) -
A high lean body mass - calculated using an equation to determine body
mass minus the fat -- may lower the risk of prostate cancer, a new
study indicates.
Prostate
cancer is a
hormone-related disease affected by a variety of other factors
including genetics, age, ethnicity and family history. In the last few
years, researchers started to suspect that body size might also affect
the risk of prostate cancer, but research has provided conflicting
results.
Most studies
investigated
body mass index, but this index includes lean and fat tissue, which may
have different influences on the risk of cancer.
In an attempt
to settle
things, Dr. John S. Witte from the University of California, San
Francisco, and his colleagues conducted a study of 439 men with
prostate cancer and 479 of their siblings without prostate cancer.
They examined
the effects
of weight, height, body mass index, and lean body mass, which they
thought might be more relevant than body mass index to the risk of
prostate cancer and aggressiveness of the disease.
The
researchers found that
the higher the lean body mass, the lower the risk of prostate cancer,
especially in men with more aggressive disease or who were older when
their cancer was diagnosed. They also observed a similar, though
weaker, inverse pattern for weight, but found no associations between
risk of prostate cancer and body mass index or height.
The
investigators suspect
that the inverse associations between higher lean body mass and
prostate cancer risk may reflect the potentially protective effect of
high levels of the male hormone androgen in patients with high lean
body mass on the development and progression of prostate cancer.
SOURCE: Journal of Urology, December 2005.
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