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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / November 2005

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High number of cancers due to obesity: study

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Roman Bystrianyk - 02 Nov 2005 11:48 GMT
Megan Rauscher, "High number of cancers due to obesity: study", Reuters
UK, November 1, 2005,
Link:
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=healthNews&storyID=2005-11
-01T215219Z_01_WRI178674_RTRIDST_0_HEALTH-HIGH-CANCERS-STUDY-DC.XML&archived=Fal
se


In the United States, roughly 10 percent of all cancers -- more than
100,000 cases a year -- could be avoided if overweight and obesity did
not exist, according to updated statistics on the proportion of cancer
due to obesity released Monday.

The new projections stem from a review of published studies, updates to
the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) report from
2002, and data from the Nurses' Health Study II, which includes 116,686
women, Dr. Graham Colditz explained at a press briefing at the American
Association for Cancer Research's international conference on Frontiers
in Cancer Prevention Research underway in Baltimore.

By applying the current US levels of overweight and obesity, Colditz
from the Harvard School of Public Health estimated that 14 percent of
colon cancers -- over 14,000 cases -- would be avoided if no one was
overweight or obese.

Likewise, if no one was overweight or obese, "we would avoid 11 percent
of breast cancer -- over 18,000 cases; 49 percent of endometrial
cancer, almost 20,000 cases; 31 percent of kidney cancer, over 11,000
cases; 39 percent of esophageal cancer, 5,500 cases; 14 percent of
pancreas cancers, 4,500 cases; 20 percent of non-Hodgkin lymphoma
cases, over 11,000 cases; and for multiple myeloma 17 percent of
cases," Colditz told reporters.

Given the increasing prevalence of obesity in the US, these estimates
are conservative, he said.

"We can clearly conclude that adult overweight and obesity cause
cancer," Dr. Colditz said, "and increasing rates of obesity in the US
are continuing to drive up the burden of these cancers."

The data, he added "reinforce the message to avoid weight gain as an
adult and to lose weight and keep it off if one is overweight or obese
as this can reduce the risk of cancer in addition to other chronic
diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, and stroke."

Evidence is accumulating that losing weight will reduce the risk of
cancer, Colditz also said, noting that data from four studies looking
at weight and breast cancer suggest that women who lose 5 to 20 pounds
significantly reduce their risk of developing breast cancer.
Mike Radcliffe - 03 Nov 2005 12:13 GMT
> In the United States, roughly 10 percent of all cancers -- more than
> 100,000 cases a year -- could be avoided if overweight and obesity did
> not exist, according to updated statistics on the proportion of cancer
> due to obesity released Monday.

It sounds like if a person is twice the average person's weight he has two
peoples chances of getting cancer. Makes a lot of sense.
MIKE
madiba - 03 Nov 2005 22:01 GMT
> > In the United States, roughly 10 percent of all cancers -- more than
> > 100,000 cases a year -- could be avoided if overweight and obesity did
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> two peoples chances of getting cancer. Makes a lot of sense.
> MIKE

LOL!
Where have I heard a similar argument before?
Oh yes, big breasts get cancer more often than small ones..
-they do, but it has less to do with their size (fat doesnt get cancer
easily) than with the estrogens produced by all that fat.

Signature

madiba

James Michael Howard - 03 Nov 2005 12:43 GMT
>Megan Rauscher, "High number of cancers due to obesity: study", Reuters
>UK, November 1, 2005,
[quoted text clipped - 42 lines]
>at weight and breast cancer suggest that women who lose 5 to 20 pounds
>significantly reduce their risk of developing breast cancer.

It is my hypothesis that breast cancer may be triggered by low DHEA (Annals
of Internal Medicine 2005; 142: 471-472) and increased testosterone
(International Journal of Cancer 2005; 115: 497).  Obesity is often
characterized by low DHEA and increased testosterone.  The connection with
testosterone is that testosterone reduces conversion of DHEAS to DHEA,
which essentially is a reduction in DHEA.

I suggest the connection of increased cancer in obese individuals results
from lowered DHEA.

James Michael Howard
Fayetteville, Arkansas, U.S.A.
 
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