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Introduction by Dr. Jonathan Simons, President and CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation:

Dr. Jonathan Simons, President and CEO of the Prostate Cancer FoundationThe study referenced in the Reuters article below is particularly important as it helps with thinking about fat as an organ that can affect whether a man develops prostate cancer or not. We think of fat as something that can keep a polar bear warm in the arctic or as something cosmetically highly unattractive, yet fat cells—or adipose cells—are actually an organ as well. Molecular, nutritional, and now epidemiological science is being applied to understanding fat as an organ and its interface and affects on other organs, such as the prostate.

The paper discussed in the article is very provocative and should help spur additional research. Fundamentally, ethnic differences in the known risk of prostate cancer that are associated with weight gain could be explained by how human beings accumulate body fat.  An important area of research for patients and scientists is to try to understand how fat cells, and having many of them, can actually influence the events that drive prostate cancer.

We know the pancreas makes insulin and the absence of insulin can cause diabetes, and everyone understands that the pancreas is a hormone producing organ. What is interesting about this study is we know that fat cells are hormone producing, but we do not know which hormones are involved in driving prostate cancer.

The paper suggests that if you are what eat, and you carry a significant amount of distribution of body fat, then you are increasing your risk of developing prostate cancer.

However, with all that being said, men with normal BMIs develop prostate cancer as well, which means that the distribution of adipose tissue, or fat, is not the only determinant in a man’s risk of developing prostate cancer.

The article follows below:

Trim Men Less Apt To Get Prostate Cancer
Significant weight gain after 20s creates higher risk of prostate cancer

Wednesday, Sept. 9  (Reuters Health) - Men who put on a significant number of pounds after their 20s face a higher risk of prostate cancer than those who remain close to their youthful weight -- but the effects vary by race, a new study indicates.

Researchers found that among nearly 84,000 middle-aged and older U.S. men followed for about a decade, white and African-American men who had gained weight since the age of 21 had a higher risk of developing prostate cancer.

Compared with white men who gained fewer than 10 pounds, those who gained more had twice the risk of being diagnosed with advanced or aggressive prostate cancer.

Among black men, the risks began increasing after a 25-pound weight gain -- though the link was seen only with early-stage and less-aggressive prostate tumors, and not advanced cancer.

In contrast, men of Japanese descent actually saw their prostate cancer decline with weight gain.

These differences may have something to do with racial and ethnic differences in the way people tend to put on fat as they age, Dr. Brenda Y. Hernandez of the University of Hawaii in Honolulu and her colleagues report in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.

Regardless, the researchers say, the findings do not change the general advice that people try to maintain a normal weight throughout life.

"These results do not warrant a change in the current public health messages about obesity," Dr. Elizabeth A. Platz, another researcher on the work and an associate professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, said in a written statement.

"Men of normal weight in all racial/ethnic groups should be encouraged to avoid weight gain," she said, "and men who are overweight and obese should be encouraged to lose weight for good health in general."

The study included 83,879 men between the ages of 45 and 75 living in California or Hawaii. Over an average follow-up of 10 years, 5,554 were diagnosed with prostate cancer.

There was only weak evidence that men who were heavier at the start of the study had a higher risk of the disease than thinner men. Weight gain since young adulthood, on the other hand, showed a stronger link -- at least in white and black men.

The findings appear to be the first to find ethnic differences in the relationship between body size and prostate cancer, according to the researchers.

It's possible, they say, that differences in body fat distribution help explain the findings. White men, for example, have been found to have more visceral fat -- deep fat surrounding the abdominal organs -- than African-American men, even with total body fat taken into account.

Excess body fat may, in theory, raise prostate cancer risk by altering levels of various hormones, including testosterone and insulin, or through other metabolic effects. It's thought that visceral fat, in comparison to body fat elsewhere, is more likely to spur such physiological changes.

More studies, the researchers conclude, are needed to see how and why weight gain may have varying effects in men of different races and ethnicities.

Reuters

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