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Abnormal Body Weight related to Increased
Mortality in Colon Cancer Patients
Newswise, September 2010 — Postmenopausal
women diagnosed with colon cancer may be at
increased risk of death if they fail to
maintain a healthy body weight before cancer
diagnosis, according to a study published in
the September issue ofCancer Epidemiology,
Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the
American Association for Cancer Research.
The researchers found that women considered
“underweight” or “obese,” or who had
increased abdominal obesity prior to cancer
diagnosis seemed to face a greater risk of
mortality.
“Maintaining a healthy body weight is
beneficial for postmenopausal women. This
may also be beneficial for those diagnosed
with colon cancer later in life. It looks
like abdominal obesity may be a useful
indicator of higher colon cancer mortality,”
said Anna E. Prizment, Ph.D., M.P.H., a
postdoctoral fellow in the division of
epidemiology and community health at the
University of Minnesota, Masonic Cancer
Center.
“It is too early to say whether a decrease
in weight characteristics after diagnosis
will also decrease mortality risk; at that
point it may be too late. Therefore, it’s
best to maintain a normal, healthy body
weight throughout life.”
Prizment and colleagues extracted data from
the Iowa Women’s Health Study, which
included 1,096 women diagnosed with colon
cancer who were observed over a maximum
20-year period. During that time, 493 died,
of which 289 died from colon cancer.
Women classified as obese, with a BMI of at
least 30 kg/m2, had a 45 percent increased
overall mortality rate. The few women
classified as underweight, with a BMI less
than 18.5 kg/m2, had an 89 percent increased
mortality rate compared to those with normal
BMI.
Furthermore, women with high waist-to-hip
ratio had a 30 to 40 percent greater risk of
colon cancer related death. Prizment said
that the “exact mechanisms underlying the
link between obesity and higher mortality of
colon cancer patients are unknown.”
“Obese people may be diagnosed at later
stage, have different treatment or more
comorbidities,” she said. However, the facts
that the increased abdominal obesity was
associated with colon cancer mortality and
those associations persisted after
correcting for age, stage at cancer
diagnosis and comorbidities suggest that
obesity could have a direct biological
effect.
"Obese women, especially those with
higher abdominal obesity, have higher
hormone levels and may have more aggressive
cancer. These women have been already known
to have a higher risk of developing colon
cancer.
Prizment encouraged further investigation of
the potential effect of obesity, in
particular, abdominal obesity, on the
prognosis after colon cancer diagnosis.
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