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High Blood Sugar Levels in Older Women
linked to Colorectal Cancer
November 30, 2011-- Elevated blood sugar
levels are associated with an increased
risk of colorectal cancer, according to
a study led by researchers atAlbert
Einstein College of Medicine of
Yeshiva University.
The findings, observed in nearly 5,000
postmenopausal women, appear in the November
29 online edition of the British Journal
of Cancer.
According to the American Cancer Society,
colorectal cancer is the third most commonly
diagnosed cancer and the third leading cause
of cancer death in both men and women in the
U.S.
Statistics compiled by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention for 2007 (the
most recent year for which figures are
available) show that 142,672 Americans were
diagnosed with colorectal cancer, including
69,917 women; the 53,219 deaths from
colorectal cancer that year were divided
almost equally between men and women.
The Einstein study involved women who were
enrolled in the National Institutes of
Health’s landmark Women’s Health Initiative
study. For these women, fasting blood sugar
and insulin levels had been measured at
baseline (i.e., the start of the study) and
then several more times over the next 12
years.
By the end of the 12-year period, 81 of the
women had developed colorectal cancer. The
researchers found that elevated baseline
glucose levels were associated with
increased colorectal cancer risk—and that
women in the highest third of baseline
glucose levels were nearly twice as likely
to have developed colorectal cancer as women
in the lowest third of blood glucose levels.
Results were similar when the scientists
looked at repeated glucose measurements over
time. No association was found between
insulin levels and risk for colorectal
cancer.
Obesity—usually accompanied by elevated
blood levels of insulin and glucose—is a
known risk factor for colorectal cancer.
Researchers have long suspected that
obesity’s influence on colorectal cancer
risk stems from the elevated insulin levels
it causes. But the Einstein study suggests
that obesity’s impact on this cancer may be
due to elevated glucose levels, or to some
factor correlated with elevated glucose
levels.
“The next challenge is to find the mechanism
by which chronically elevated blood glucose
levels may lead to colorectal cancer,” said
Geoffrey Kabat, Ph.D., a senior
epidemiologist at Einstein and lead author
of the paper. “It’s possible that elevated
glucose leads to, or is correlated with,
increased blood levels of growth factors and
inflammatory factors that spur the growth of
intestinal polyps, some of which later
develop into cancer.”
The paper is titled “A Longitudinal Study of
Serum Insulin and Glucose Levels in Relation
to Colorectal Cancer Risk among
Postmenopausal Women.” Other Einstein
authors are Mimi
Kim, Sc.D.,
and Howard
Strickler M.D.,
both professors in the department of epidemiology
and population health,
and senior author Thomas
E. Rohan, M.D., Ph.D., professor
and chair of epidemiology and population
health.