Prostate Cancer
Victims' lifestyles examined
Corinne E. Joshu, M.P.H., Ph.D., a
postdoctoral fellow in the department of
epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health in Baltimore and
colleagues followed 1,337 men with
clinically-localized prostate cancer who
underwent prostatectomy between 1993 and
2006.
Participants completed a survey on dietary,
lifestyle and medical factors (i.e. weight,
height, physical activity and sedentary
behavior) five years before surgery and one
year after.
By the end of follow-up in 2008, 102 men had
prostate cancer recurrence. Men whose cancer
had recurred were older, more likely to have
poorer pathological tumor characteristics
and were less likely to have a family
history of prostate cancer than men whose
cancer did not recur.
“Weight gain of at least five pounds five
years before surgery, to one year after
surgery was associated with a nearly
two-fold increased of prostate cancer
recurrence compared with men who maintained
their weight,” said Joshu.
At five years prior to prostatectomy, 54
percent of the men were overweight and 9
percent were obese; among men who gained at
least five pounds, the average weight gain
was about 10 pounds by one year after
surgery, according to Joshu. Obesity after
surgery was associated with about a 1.7-fold
increased risk.
“Our message is consistent with public
health messages that are given for chronic
conditions and other types of cancer: it is
best for men to avoid weight gain or
obesity, especially as they age — including
men with prostate cancer,” said Joshu.
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