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High Hormone Levels
Linked to Prostate Risk
Men over 50 who have higher levels of
testosterone have a higher risk of prostate cancer, U.S. researchers
reported.
The findings may mean that men
should be cautious about a new kind of treatment called testosterone
replacement therapy, being tested in older men who see a decline
in general health and vigor.
A study of more than 750 men showed
those with the highest levels of free testosterone in the blood
were the most likely to have prostate cancer.
"Since testosterone replacement
therapy increases the amount of free testosterone in the blood,
older men considering or receiving testosterone replacement should
be counseled as to the association until data from long-term clinical
trials becomes available," said Dr. Kellogg Parsons, a urologist
at Johns Hopkins University who led the study, said in a statement.
The association between free testosterone
and prostate cancer risk in older men was not affected by height,
weight, percent of body fat or muscle mass, Parsons told a meeting
of the American Urological Association in San Francisco.
A second study presented at the
same conference found that obese men may be more likely to see
their prostate cancer come back after surgery.
Another Johns Hopkins team found
that obese men are more likely than men with normal weight to
have high levels of prostate specific antigen, or PSA. PSA is
produced by prostate cells and is overproduced when the prostate
becomes cancerous.
"Our results show that moderately
and severely obese men were at an increased risk for high PSA
levels after surgery and therefore are likely to have prostate
cancer recurrence," said Dr. Stephen Freedland, who led the study.
His team studied 1,106 patients
treated at five Veteran's Administration and military hospitals
across the country.
"Our findings add to the burgeoning
list of chronic and deadly diseases associated with obesity and
underscore the importance of this major public health problem,"
Freedland said.
Obesity is also linked with pancreatic,
breast and colon cancer, as well as heart disease and diabetes.
More on Prostate
Cancer
Reference
Source 89
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