Obesity and Metabolism: Weight gain and the
growing risk of Cancer
Newswise — During this holiday season with its tempting
bounty of edible delights, new research
calls attention to the role of the expanding
American waistline in health and medicine.
Today, researchers at the American Association for Cancer
Research’s Sixth Annual International
Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention
Research, held from December 5
to 8,2007 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
present some of the latest research linking
obesity, diabetes and metabolism to cancer
risk. Their findings link weight gain and
diabetes to a variety of cancers affecting
both men and women, including breast,
prostate and colorectal cancer
Diabetes and hyper-insulinemia as predictors
of colorectal cancer risk in a prospective
cohort of women. Abstract no. B93:
Women with diabetes are 1.5 times more likely to develop
colorectal cancer than those who do not have
the metabolic disorder, according to
researchers at the University of Minnesota.
The findings, they say, add to the complex
body of evidence linking diet and colorectal
cancer and also provide new evidence that
furthers our understanding of the role of
insulin in cancer promotion.
“Colorectal cancer and type II diabetes share a number of
common factors, including obesity, so it is
interesting to see the direct line between
these two conditions,” said Andrew Flood,
Ph.D., assistant professor in the Division
of Epidemiology and Community Health at the
University of Minnesota School of Public
Health and the University of Minnesota
Cancer Center ”In general, the idea is that
if elevated insulin levels create a
biochemical environment conducive to cancer
growth, it provides one mechanism by which
diet and lifestyle can really influence
cancer risk.”
With funding from the National Cancer Institute, Flood and
his colleagues examined data from a massive
screening study called the Breast Cancer
Detection Demonstration Project, initiated
at 29 centers throughout the United States
in the 1970s. Flood’s team subsequently
followed more than 45,000 study participants
with no history of colorectal cancer or
self-reported diabetes for eight years,
(from 1987-1989 and from 1995-1998), to
identify which of them subsequently
developed colorectal cancer. According to
their findings, women with diabetes had a
greatly increased risk of developing
colorectal cancer. “These results remained
statistically significant even after
controlling for all known and suspected
confounding variables,” Flood said.
According to Flood, it is not exactly clear what aspect of
diabetes is the underlying cause for this
increased risk, but one hypothesis centers
on the elevated concentration of insulin
typically seen in people with type II
diabetes. “In the early stages of the
disease process, people become insulin
resistant, meaning they must produce more
and more insulin to regulate their blood
sugar,” Flood said.
“Even after frank diabetes begins, insulin levels remain
chronically elevated for extended periods
before the pancreas can no longer supply the
level of insulin the body demands,” Flood
said. “If the elevated insulin is the
problem, then pre-diabetics, who are also
hyper-insulinemic, should also be at
increased risk (for developing colorectal
cancer).”
To test that idea, Flood and his colleagues re-analyzed the
data, this time including women who were
likely pre-diabetic at the beginning of the
follow-up period. The idea, Flood says, is
that these women were likely hyper-insulinemic
at that stage. Surprisingly, the elevated
risk, while still significant, had dropped
slightly in comparison with that of known
diabetics, Flood says.
According to Flood, this suggests that either the
pre-diabetic women had not had elevated
insulin long enough or intensely enough to
increase risk as they observed in the
diabetic women, or alternatively, something
other than or in addition to hyper-insulinemia
could explain the significant, increased
risk for colorectal cancer they observed in
people with diabetes.
Fasting C-peptide levels and breast cancer
death in women with breast cancer: The
Health, Eating, Activity and Lifestyle
(HEAL) Study. Abstract no. B99:
Women with invasive breast cancer and high blood levels of
C-peptide (a marker of insulin secretion)
face a risk of death nearly three times
higher than women with lower blood levels of
C-peptide, according to findings from the
Health, Eating, Activity and Lifestyle
(HEAL) Study, a long-term observational
study of breast cancer patients. The effect
was most notable, researchers say, among
women in their 40s.
While previous research has demonstrated that insulin
stimulates the growth of breast cancer cells
in the laboratory, few studies have examined
the link between fasting insulin or
C-peptide levels and breast cancer
prognosis. Women with invasive breast cancer
– meaning the cancer had spread throughout
the breast tissue or to surrounding tissues
– faced the greatest risk from high
C-peptide levels, the researchers say, but
the association was detected in nearly all
women studied, regardless of whether or not
their cancer had spread.
“When looking at risk of diabetes and hypertension, breast
cancer survivors really should talk to their
oncologist about how to lower their insulin
levels,” said Melinda L. Irwin, Ph.D.,
M.P.H., assistant professor at Yale
University’s School of Public Health. “The
simple message is that breast cancer
patients should take proven steps to lower
their blood insulin levels, including
exercise and eating a diet rich in fruits
and vegetables and low in fat.”
The HEAL Study is a National Cancer Institute initiative
designed to examine the links between diet,
physical activity, body fat, and breast
cancer prognosis. Patients enrolled in the
HEAL Study -- including those participating
in the study reported here – were diagnosed
or treated at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center, the University of New
Mexico or the University of Southern
California.
Between 1995 and 1998, the researchers followed 689 women
enrolled in the HEAL program who were
diagnosed with breast cancer, but who did
not have type 2 diabetes. They monitored
their health at periodic intervals beginning
six months after diagnosis until September
2004 or the patient’s death. From each
patient, they collected a fasting blood
sample – a common technique for measuring a
baseline of insulin or C-peptide levels –
and information on prognostic, demographic,
and lifestyle factors, including weight and
height.
In order to determine the relationship between C-peptide
levels and prognosis, Irwin and her
colleagues statistically adjusted the data
they collected for confounding variables
such as body mass index, age, race, disease
stage and therapy used in treatment. They
found that, when arranged into three groups
based on C-peptide levels, women in the top
third of the group (highest levels) had
twice the risk of death compared to women in
the bottom third. When looking at just women
with invasive breast cancer, the risk of
death among women with high C-peptide levels
was three times higher than among women with
low C-peptide levels. “Our findings clearly
show that C-peptide and most likely insulin,
in and of itself, is a marker for breast
cancer prognosis,” Irwin said.
According to Irwin, the association was also common in women
in their 40s with early stage breast cancer,
and less pronounced in women in their 50s or
60s. “The higher death rate among younger
women suggests that these women may have had
more aggressive tumors, possibly related to
tumor genetics or family history,” said
Irwin.
Association of C-peptide concentration with prostate cancer
incidence in a prospective cohort. Abstract
no. B89:
While studies have consistently shown that men with diabetes
are at a decreased risk for prostate cancer,
the reasons have been unclear. By evaluating
prostate cancer data from a large, long-term
cohort study, researchers at Johns Hopkins
University have shown that those with high
concentrations of C-peptide – a marker of
high insulin secretion that is a hallmark of
diabetes – had a measurable decrease in
prostate cancer risk.
“Metabolic perturbations influence cancer risk, that much is
becoming clear to us, and we are learning
more about the fundamental issues in biology
that guide prostate cancer development,”
said Gabriel Lai, a doctoral student in the
Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health. “One
interesting possibility is that, over time,
diabetics generally have less testosterone
in their bloodstream than non-diabetics,
which might lower risk of prostate cancer.”
Lai and his colleagues used data from a large-scale study
known as CLUE II, which had enrolled almost
23,000 adults in Washington County, Maryland
in 1989. With funding from the National
Cancer Institute, they examined the history
of 264 men with confirmed prostate cancer
and matched them with a group of 264 men
without prostate cancer with a similar
distribution of age and race.
For each participant, the researchers measured the amount of
C-peptide in the blood they donated when
they enrolled in the study. Researchers
consider C-peptide to be a surrogate marker
for insulin secretion because both molecules
derive from the same precursor molecule,
with insulin degrading faster than
C-peptide. They found that patients that had
elevated levels of C-peptide in their
bloodstream when they started the study were
about one-third less likely to develop
prostate cancer later. This was true even
among men without diabetes.
The researchers also report a markedly lower risk of
non-metastasized prostate cancer. Men with
higher C-peptide levels in their blood were
half as likely to develop organ-confined
prostate cancer, Lai says.
“Even though diabetes and obesity are often linked to
different types of cancer, our findings
illustrate the idea that the link between
cancer and metabolic diseases is not the
same for every variety of cancer,” Lai said.
“Obviously, having high levels of insulin
does not promote health but perhaps such
disorders can provide insight into the
mechanisms of prostate cancer to help us
learn how to eventually prevent prostate
cancer.”
Post-diagnosis weight change, body mass
index, and breast cancer survival. Abstract
no. B95:
Gaining weight following a diagnosis of invasive breast
cancer could increase a woman’s risk of
death from the disease by more than half,
according to researchers leading the
Collaborative Women’s Longevity Study. In
fact, the researchers associated weight gain
with a measurable increase in risk of death
due to all causes, not just breast cancer.
“Our findings provide additional support for the benefits of
maintaining a healthy weight and
exercising,” said Hazel B. Nichols, a
doctoral student in the Department of
Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health. “According to our
results, there is a 14 percent increase in
risk for every five kilograms -- about 11
pounds -- of weight gained.”
To analyze the effect of weight gain on
breast cancer survival, Nichols and her
colleagues contacted women who had taken
part in one of three previous studies begun
in 1988 at sites in Wisconsin, Massachusetts
and New Hampshire. Between 1998 and 2001,
Nichols’ team surveyed the women about
post-diagnosis weight, weight gain, physical
activity, diet and related items.
Of the original 4,021 breast cancer patients, the researchers
identified 121 breast cancer-related deaths
and 428 total deaths. For women classified
as obese by body mass index – a measure of
weight and height – the risk of dying from
breast cancer was nearly 2.4 times that of
women classified with a normal body weight.
“Obesity was associated with risk of death
even after accounting for age, menopausal
status or smoking,” Nichols said.
Nichols’study was funded by the Susan G. Komen for the Cure
Breast Cancer Foundation.
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