Diabetes and obesity, one of the main causes of the most common form
of the disease, are both independent risk factors for a variety of
cancers. Some previous research suggests that this may be due at
least in part to biological changes caused by these conditions such
as high blood sugar levels and chronic inflammation as well as
increased production of estrogen in women and decreased testosterone
in men.
To see if men and women with diabetes might have different risks of
developing cancer, researchers examined data from 47 studies with a
total of more than 19.2 million participants.
Compared to people without diabetes, women with diabetes were 27
percent more likely to develop cancer and men were 19 percent more
likely to develop cancer, the study found.
While the smaller studies included in this analysis were not
controlled experiments designed to prove whether or how diabetes
might cause cancer, high blood sugar levels that can accompany
diabetes can lead to DNA damage that may cause cancer, said lead
study author Toshiaki Ohkuma of the George Institute for Global
Health in New South Wales, Australia.
This, of course, holds true for both men and women, Ohkuma said by
email.
It's possible women with diabetes have a higher cancer risk than men
because women go longer with slightly elevated blood sugar that's
not full-blown diabetes but can still damage cells, Ohkuma said.
"In addition, after diagnosis of diabetes, women are often
undertreated or not getting the same level of treatment as men,"
Ohkuma added. "This means that cumulative exposure to cancer-causing
(high blood sugar) may be longer (and more pronounced) in women than
men, and thus women are at greater risk of developing cancer."
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For many cancers that can develop in both women and men, women were
more at risk, the researchers report in Diabetologia.
Compared to men with diabetes, women with diabetes were 11 percent
more likely to develop kidney cancer, 13 percent more likely to get
oral malignancies, 14 percent more likely to get stomach tumors and
15 percent more likely to get leukemia.
Women with diabetes, however, were 12 percent less likely to develop
liver cancer than men with diabetes.
To minimize their risk of cancers associated with diabetes, men and
women alike should focus on healthy behaviors that can prevent
diabetes from developing in the first place, said Dr. Graham Colditz,
associate director of prevention and control at the Siteman Cancer
Center and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis,
Missouri.
"Don't smoke; be physically active; and eat a diet filled with
fruits, vegetables and whole grains and low in red and processed
meats," Colditz, who wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
"These behaviors can have health benefits no matter what your weight
and even if you also have diabetes."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2uSVRU6 Diabetologia, online July 20, 2018
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