Cancer prevention news tips
Newswise — The following are based on abstracts presented at the
American Association for Cancer Research’s Fifth Annual
International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research
held November 12 – 15 in Boston.
LOWER CHOLESTEROL MAY CUT RISK OF AGGRESSIVE PROSTATE CANCER
Men with lower cholesterol are less likely to experience high-grade
prostate cancer - an aggressive form of the disease with poor
prognosis. Johns Hopkins epidemiologists, in a prospective study of
U.S. men, say lower blood levels of the heart-clogging fat may
reduce a man's risk of this form of cancer by one-third.
Cholesterol, often stored in tumors, may change the structure of
fatty cell membranes to produce signals that influence cancer cell
growth and survival.
In the study, Elizabeth Platz, Sc.D., M.P.H., epidemiologist at the
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Kimmel Cancer
Center and her colleagues compared a group of 698 men with prostate
cancer to an equal number with no evidence of the disease. All
participants were part of Harvard's Health Professionals Follow-up
Study. There were no differences in blood cholesterol levels in
either group when matched up to the incidence of low-grade disease.
But men with higher levels of blood cholesterol were one-third less
likely to get high-grade cancers that tend to spread and grow
faster.
Platz and her colleagues previously linked lower risk of advanced
prostate cancer to men taking cholesterol-lowering statin-drugs.
"These two studies suggest that we may be able to prevent dangerous
prostate cancers by tampering with cholesterol metabolism," she
added.
This study was funded by the National Cancer Institute and the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Co-authors include Steven K. Clinton from Ohio State University and
Edward Giovannucci from Harvard University.
ASPIRIN MAY REDUCE BREAST CANCER RISK ASSOCIATED WITH SEARED FOOD
Searing meats in on open-flame grills or with other forms of direct
heat creates tasty bits of char but also carcinogens called
heterocyclic amines or HCA. Now, researchers have found that aspirin
may reduce the cancer-causing effects of flame-broiled foods in
women who eat the seared meats often.
In a study of 312 women with breast cancer and 316 cancer-free study
subjects, women who reported eating flame-broiled food more than
twice a month were 1.7 times more likely to develop breast cancer
than women who never ate them.
Breast cancer risk was further increased in those who ate
flame-broiled foods more than twice a month and had genetic traits
that helped them rapidly metabolize enzymes called N-acetyltransferases
that are often found in the gut, liver and breast. The digested
enzymes activate the cancer-causing HCAs.
“We also found that within the highest risk group, women who
reported using aspirin significantly reduced their breast cancer
risk to the same levels as those who never ate flame-broiled foods,”
says Johns Hopkins epidemiologist and oncologist Kala Visvanathan,
M.D., M.H.S., who is the first author of the study.
The researchers say further lab work to better understand the
biological connection between aspirin, flame-broiled foods, and
breast cancer.
To cut HCA exposure, experts suggest marinating meat, frequently
flipping it while cooking, or microwaving it.
Funding was provided by the National Institutes of Health.
This study is based in the CLUE Cohorts of Washington County
Maryland and the participants of this research are part of the CLUE
2 cohort. In addition to Visvanathan, authors include K. J.
Helzlsouer from Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore; X. You, S.C.
Hoffman and P.T. Strickland at Johns Hopkins; D. Bell from the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; and A.J. Alberg
from the Medical University of South Carolina.