|
Widespread
Pain Could Warn of Cancer
Excerpt
By
Serena Gordon,
HealthScoutNews
Could widespread pain be a warning
sign of cancer?
British researchers think it might
be.
After following more than 6,000
people for nine years, researchers from the University of Manchester
found those who reported having widespread pain at the start of
the study were much more likely to have been diagnosed with cancer
by the end of the study.
They were also less likely to survive
their cancer, according to the study, published in the June issue
of Arthritis and Rheumatism.
"We found that those who originally
had widespread pain had a 60 percent increased risk of getting
cancer and, if they did get cancer, their survival was poorer,"
says study author Dr. Gary Macfarlane, an epidemiology professor
at the university.
But, Macfarlane cautions, this
could be a "chance" finding. He says the results need
to be duplicated before a link between pain and the development
of cancer can be confirmed.
During 1991 and 1992, the researchers
recruited 6,331 people between the ages of 18 and 85 who had never
been diagnosed with cancer for the study.
Fifteen percent of the group reported
having widespread pain, such as persistent, achy joints all over.
About 48 percent reported having regional pain, and 37 percent
of the study participants said they had no pain.
The average age of those with widespread
pain was 55 years, and 66 percent were female. Of those reporting
regional pain, 58 percent were female, and the average age was
49 years. Fifty-four percent of the no-pain group was female and
the average age was 42.
At the end of the nine-year period,
395 people had developed cancer -- 90 from the widespread pain
group, 198 from the regional pain group and 107 from the no-pain
group.
According to the study, people
with regional pain are about 20 percent more likely than people
with no pain to develop cancer and people who reported widespread
pain were 60 percent more likely to develop cancer.
The association between widespread
pain and cancer was strongest for breast cancer, but was also
significantly increased for prostate, lung and large bowel cancer.
People with widespread pain who
went on to develop cancer also had poorer outcomes than those
without pain. They were more likely to die from their cancers,
especially breast and prostate cancer.
Macfarlane says the researchers
don't know how to explain these findings.
Dr. Todd Schlifstein, an attending
physician at the Hospital for Joint Diseases at New York University
School of Medicine in New York City, has one theory.
"People with chronic pain
may be at a higher risk for other problems, because chronic pain
affects all aspects of your life," he says.
They often have trouble sleeping,
can't exercise and suffer from depression or social isolation,
he says. And chronic pain may also dampen the immune system, which
might play a role in the development of cancer, he adds.
Schlifstein points out that people
with widespread pain were probably seeking medical care for their
pain. That means, he says, they probably underwent more diagnostic
tests than most people do, and their cancers may have simply been
picked up incidentally while doctors were searching to pinpoint
the cause of the pain.
Macfarlane adds it's important
for people to realize that not everyone in the study with widespread
pain developed cancer. Most, in fact, did not.
So, if you're suffering from chronic
pain, he says, you don't need to be worried that it's a sign you
will develop cancer.
"This is an isolated finding
at present and would need to be replicated before we believed
that there may be a link," Macfarlane says.
More information
To learn more about cancer and
pain, visit CancerPain.org
or the American
Cancer Society.
Reference
Source 89
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|