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Obesity
Behind 90,000
Cancer Deaths Each Year
Excerpt
By Alison
McCook,
Reuters Health
A significant proportion of deaths from cancer may be due to excess
body weight and obesity, according to an American Cancer Society
report.
Based on a study involving almost
one million adults, the researchers conclude that 14 percent of
deaths from cancer in men and 20 percent of cancer deaths in women
may be due to being overweight and obese.
The study's authors estimate that
more than 90,000 cancer deaths each year could be avoided if every
American maintained a healthy weight.
"Obesity is related to most cancer
sites, not just a select few," study author Dr. Eugenia E. Calle
told Reuters Health.
Calle said she hopes these results
help people understand the devastating impact being overweight
or obese can have on health.
"I'm hoping that this study will
increase the public awareness that this is yet another important
health outcome that obesity puts you at higher risk for," Calle
noted.
During the 16-year study, Calle
and her colleagues followed more than 900,000 U.S. adults who
were free of cancer in 1982, noting if any died of the disease.
The researchers measured body weight using body mass index, which
takes into account weight and height.
Compared to people of normal weight,
those who were overweight and obese had a higher risk of death
from a host of different cancers, according to a report in The
New England Journal of Medicine.
Among both sexes, excess body weight
upped the risk of death from cancer of the esophagus, colon and
rectum, liver, gallbladder, pancreas and kidney, as well as for
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and multiple myeloma.
In men, the heaviest individuals
were more likely to die from cancer of the stomach and prostate.
In women, excess deaths were seen for cancer of the breast, uterus,
cervix and ovary.
And the higher the BMI, the more
likely a person was to die from cancer, the researchers report.
A BMI of between 18.5 and 24.9
is considered normal, between 25.0 and 29.9 overweight, and 30.0
or more obese.
Among the heaviest people -- with
BMIs of at least 40 -- the risk of death from cancer of any type
was 52 percent higher in men and 62 percent higher in women than
in people with normal BMIs.
"The more weight you have, the
higher the risk," Calle said in an interview.
However, the fact that death risk
appears to increase incrementally with body weight is somewhat
encouraging, she added.
"Losing any kind of weight would
help," Calle noted.
She explained that the current
study measures risk of death from cancer, but not the risk of
developing the disease. Previous research in breast cancer has
shown that carrying extra weight can increase the risk of both
getting and dying from the disease, Calle said, but for other
types of cancer, that may not be the case.
Although the exact reasons why
obesity might increase cancer death risk are unclear, Calle said
that people with relatively high BMIs also tend to have higher
levels of hormones in their bodies, which can predispose them
to cancer.
In addition, research suggests
that carrying excess weight in the abdomen can disrupt the metabolism
of insulin, resulting in a condition that can increase cancer
risks, she explained.
People who are obese are also more
likely to develop gallstones and reflux disease, which can lead
to chronic inflammation in the body and, subsequently, certain
types of cancer, Calle added.
In a related editorial, Drs. Hans-Olov
Adami of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and Dimitrios Trichopoulos
of Harvard University in Boston write that this is not the first
study to suggest that excess body weight increases cancer risk.
However, they write that programs
aimed at preventing cancer through weight control have been stymied
by a number of reasons, including the fact that other factors
such as smoking play a larger role, and researchers remain uncertain
why being overweight influences cancer risk.
It remains to be seen whether the
latest findings "will provide the necessary additional motivation
for controlling body weight in the United States and around the
world," Adami and Trichopoulos write.
Trichopoulos has received fees
from NutraSweet and Coca-Cola.
SOURCE: The New England Journal
of Medicine 2003;348:1625-1638.
Reference
Source 89
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