Direct verband tussen hoog cholesterol en prostaatkanker.*
Uit een uitgebreide Italiaanse studie blijkt dat er een direct verband bestaat tussen hoge cholesterolwaarden (>200 mg/dl of ca 5 mmol/l) en prostaatkanker. 50% van de mannen met prostaatkanker bleken hoge cholesterolwaarden te hebben. Bij mannen jonger dan 50 of ouder dan 65 bleek zelfs 80% van hen te hoge cholesterolwaarden te hebben.
Direct
Link Between High Cholesterol And Prostate Cancer Found
Researchers
from Italy have found what they believe to be the first direct link between
high cholesterol levels and prostate
cancer.
A possible association has been suggested before but evidence has been
limited. This new study, published on-line in Annals of Oncology[1] shows a
statistically significant direct relationship between the two conditions.
Lead author Dr Francesca Bravi, an epidemiologist from the Istituto di
Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri in Milan, said: "Although the study
relied on participants' self-reported medical conditions, the absence of an
association between prostate
cancer
and about 10 other medical conditions we investigated indicates that the
relationship we found between prostate
cancer
and high cholesterol appears to be a real one."
The research team worked on data from a case-control study carried out in
four Italian areas between 1991 and 2002, involving 1,294 men under age 75
with prostate cancer and 1,451 matched controls admitted to the same
hospitals with acute non-cancerous conditions.
All cases and controls were interviewed in hospital by trained interviewers
using wide-ranging structured questionnaires. These included a
problem-oriented section on patients' medical history covering about 10
non-cancerous conditions, including hypercholesterolaemia (high cholesterol)
and gallstones.
Dr Bravi said: "We found that, after allowing for any potential
confounding factors, men with prostate cancer were around 50% more likely to
have had high cholesterol levels[2] than our non-prostate cancer controls.
The association was somewhat stronger for men whose high cholesterol levels
had been diagnosed before they were 50 and for men over 65, where there was
an 80% greater likelihood of high cholesterol levels. We also found that
prostate cancer patients were 26% more likely to have suffered from
gallstones than our controls, with an apparently higher relationship in
thinner men. Although that figure was not statistically significant,
gallstones are often related to high cholesterol levels. To our knowledge
there have been no previous studies reporting any relationship between
gallstones and prostate cancer."
Co-author Dr Cristina Bosetti, a senior epidemiologist and biostatistician
at the same institute, explained: "Androgens - hormones that have a
role in prostate tissue and cancer - are synthesised from cholesterol,
suggesting a possible biological relationship between high cholesterol and prostate
cancer.
Gallstones are related to high cholesterol levels as well and are often
composed of cholesterol. So, the direct relationship we found between
gallstones and prostate
cancer,
while it was not statistically significant, suggests a similar biological
mechanism may explain the link."
This study had relied on participant's self-reporting medical conditions:
the researchers believe that their results should be confirmed by further
studies, including prospective investigations with reliable measured
cholesterol levels.
Dr Bosetti concluded: "There are some laboratory data suggesting
statins may have preventive potential against prostate
cancer
and our results do give an indirect suggestion that statins may help in
lowering prostate
cancer
risk. However, studies to date on cholesterol-lowering statins and prostate
cancer
have been limited and inconclusive."
###
[1] Self-reported history of hypercholesterolaemia and gallstones and the
risk of prostate cancer. Annals of Oncology. doi:10.1093/annonc/mdi080.
[2] Hypercholesterolaemia (high cholesterol levels): In this study
hypercholesterolaemia was classified as any cholesterol over the normal
level (>200 mg/dl or approximately 5 mmol/l).
A PDF of the research paper is available on request.
Please acknowledge Annals of Oncology as a source in any reports.
Annals of Oncology is the monthly journal of the European Society for
Medical Oncology. Annals of Oncology website: http://annonc.oxfordjournals.org/
(april
2006)
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