Researchers
Present Data Linking Obesity/Overweight
to Higher Cancer Risk, Poorer Cancer Survival
WASHINGTON, DC - Approximately 100,500 cancers occurring in the US every year
can be attributed to excess body fat, according to estimates released today by
the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR). The figure underscores the
central role that overweight and obesity are now understood to play both in the
development of cancer and in cancer survivorship, said researchers.
The new estimate was calculated by combining the latest US cancer incidence data
with the conclusions of the AICR/WCRF report, Policy and Action for Cancer
Prevention, released earlier this year. That report estimated the percentage of
various kinds of cancer that are attributable to such risk factors as poor diet,
lack of physical activity and excess body fat.
According to AICR, the estimated number of cancers that are linked to excess
body fat include:
49% of endometrial cancers1 = 20,700 cases/year2
35% of esophageal cancers = 5,800 cases/year
28% of pancreatic cancers = 11,900 cases/year
24% of kidney cancers = 13, 900 cases/year
21% of Gallbladder
Cancer s = 2,000 cases/year
17 % of Breast
Cancer s = 33,000 cases/year
9% of colorectal cancers = 13,200 cases/year
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TOTAL: 100,500 cases/year
1 Percentages from AICR/WCRF's Policy and Action for Cancer Prevention, 2009
2 Calculated from total estimated incidence, Cancer Facts and Figures 2009, ACS
Excess Body Fat Now Seen as Major Cause of Cancer
Laurence Kolonel, MD, PhD, Deputy Director of the Cancer Research Center of
Hawaii and AICR/WCRF expert panel member, presented the new preventability
estimates and reviewed the evidence linking obesity to cancer risk.
"We now know that carrying excess body fat plays a central role in many of
the most common cancers," he said. "And it's clearer than ever that
obesity's impact is felt before, during and after cancer - it increases risk,
makes treatment more difficult and shortens survival."
Dr. Kolonel also highlighted the conclusions of a recent AICR/WCRF expert report
which found cancers of the endometrium, esophagus, pancreas, kidney, breast
(post-menopausal) and colorectum to be convincingly linked to excess body fat,
while the link between body fatness and gallbladder cancer was judged probable.
This report is continuously updated; the new evidence on breast cancer was
released in September, with updates on colorectal cancer and prostate cancer due
in the coming months.
Dr. Kolonel also highlighted the emerging evidence that is revealing the nature
of the link between excess body fat and cancer. Some of the strongest evidence,
he noted, suggests that excess body fat increases the body's level of sex
steroids and other hormones that are linked to cancer growth. For example, fat
tissue produces estrogen; studies have shown that estrogen promotes cell
proliferation in breast tumors that contain receptors for the hormone, the
so-called ER positive tumors.
Recent findings also suggest that excess body fat lowers immune function and
increases oxidative stress, which can lead to DNA damage.
Emerging Evidence Implicates Obesity and Overweight in Poor Cancer Survivorship
Melinda Irwin, PhD, MPH, Associate Professor of Epidemiology at Yale University,
presented evidence that overweight and obesity continue to play a negative role
after cancer has been successfully treated. Dr. Irwin stressed, however, that
there are two ways of looking at data linking higher Body Mass Index (BMI) to
poorer survival, and she prefers the one that encourages survivors to get
active.
"It's true that higher BMI is associated with poorer outcomes. Now we need
to ask why this is the case," she said. "An increasing number of
studies suggest that regular physical activity improves cancer survival, even
among survivors who are overweight or obese. That's really the take-home message
here."
Dr. Irwin reviewed data showing that although obesity increases risk of death
among cancer survivors, some factors that influence obesity, such as physical
activity, have also been shown to have an impact on survival that is independent
of BMI. A growing number of publications, for example, have reported that
increasing physical activity after diagnosis, especially among those who were
inactive before they were diagnosed, is associated with an improvement in
survival.
One reason for the association between physical activity and better outcome,
said Irwin, may have to do the fact that regular physical activity helps
regulate hormone levels. Studies have shown that women with high insulin levels
at diagnosis have a 2 to 3-fold increased risk of death than is seen among women
with low insulin levels. (High insulin levels are associated with inactivity and
overweight).
Dr. Irwin presented recent findings from her own Yale Exercise and Survivorship
(YES) Study intervention trial, which showed that within 6 months, regular
exercise decreased insulin levels by about 8% among 933 breast cancer survivors.
She concluded her remarks by encouraging clinicians to recommend exercise to
their survivor patients, and praising the growing number of exercise programs
available to cancer survivors.
The researchers spoke at a press conference coinciding with AICR's Annual
Research Conference on Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity and Cancer in
Washington, DC.
***
The American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) is the cancer charity that
fosters research on the relationship of nutrition, physical activity and weight
management to cancer risk, interprets the scientific literature and educates the
public about the results. It has contributed more than $91 million for
innovative research conducted at universities, hospitals and research centers
across the country. AICR has published two landmark reports that interpret the
accumulated research in the field, and is committed to a process of continuous
review. AICR also provides a wide range of educational programs to help millions
of Americans learn to make dietary changes for lower cancer risk. Its
award-winning New American Plate program is presented in brochures, seminars and
on its website, http://www.aicr.org.
AICR is a member of the World Cancer Research Fund
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