Saturday, November 28, 2009

Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk



Weekly Health Update:



Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk





"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."


By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS



Photo of Dr. Wascher


Updated: 11/29/2009




The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.




EXERCISE & PROSTATE CANCER RISK

There is an increasing body of research evidence to suggest that many cases of cancer can be prevented through lifestyle and diet modifications. Indeed, even conservative estimates suggest that more than 60 percent of new cancer cases could be prevented simply by abstaining from unhealthy lifestyle and dietary habits. (More enthusiastic cancer prevention experts have suggested that 80 percent of cancer cases, or more, might be preventable with rigorous lifestyle and diet changes.) Given that, in the best case, modern cancer treatment results in the long-term survival of only about 60 percent of all cancer patients, and that the survival rate for many of the most lethal cancers still remains far more dismal, an ounce of cancer prevention is certainly worth much more than a pound of cancer cure. (This simple yet profound realization is the central theme of my new book, “A Cancer Prevention Guide for the Human Race,” which will be published in the spring of 2010.)

As a practicing comprehensive Surgical Oncologist, I routinely treat patients with highly lethal cancers, many of which are, sadly, incurable by the time they are diagnosed. While not every case of cancer can be prevented through lifestyle and diet modification, many of the terrible, and ultimately fatal, cancer cases that I routinely see might have been prevented with reasonably moderate alterations in the way that people choose to live their daily lives.

Prostate cancer is the most common non-skin cancer that occurs in men, and the second most common cause of cancer death in men. In 2009, an estimated 192,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed, and approximately 27,000 men will die of this disease. Prostate cancer currently afflicts 1 out of every 6 American men during their lifetimes, and accounts for 25 percent of all cancer diagnoses in men (similar, I might add, to the percentage of breast cancer cases among all cancer cases diagnosed in women). Most prostate cancers are stimulated to grow and spread by testosterone and other androgens produced by the testes, and by other tissues in the body.

The relationship between prostate cancer risk and exercise has not been entirely clear, thus far, as various clinical studies have produced contradictory findings. Some of these studies have suggested that high levels of daily physical activity may reduce the risk of prostate cancer, while other studies have not confirmed a link between prostate cancer risk and physical activity levels.

A new prospective public health study, just published in the British Journal of Cancer, adds further important evidence that increased levels of physical activity may indeed reduce the risk of developing prostate cancer. In this newly published study, nearly 46,000 men between the ages of 45 and 70 years were prospectively followed between 1998 and 2007. All of these male volunteers completed extensive questionnaires regarding their daily levels of physical activities at 30 years of age and at 50 years of age, as well as at the time or their entry into this clinical study. These questionnaires specifically included questions regarding walking or bicycling; current waist, hip and height measurements; education level; cigarette smoking; alcohol consumption; diabetes; family history of prostate cancer; and other lifestyle factors. Six predefined activity levels for occupational activity (from “mostly sitting down” to “heavy manual labor”), and additional predefined categories for time spent on different activities, were specifically included in the questionnaire, such as walking or bicycling (“hardly ever” to “more than 90 min per day”), home or household work (“less than 1 hour per day” to “more than 8 hours per day”), inactive leisure time (“from 2 hours per day or less” to “5 hours per day or more”), and active leisure-time exercising (“from less than 1 hour per week” to “more than 5 hours per week”). The patient volunteers were also queried regarding the average number of hours per day they spent sleeping.

Importantly, the researchers conducting this study took the extra step of conducting 7-day physical activity evaluations to verify that the study’s participants actually engaged in the levels of physically activity that they claimed on the questionnaires. (This additional validation step confirmed the accuracy of the questionnaire information supplied by the study’s volunteers.) The incidence of prostate cancer, and the death rate associated with prostate cancer, among these 45,887 middle-aged and elderly men were then analyzed at the conclusion of this very large prospective epidemiological study.

When the men who engaged in physical activity at the highest levels were compared with those at the lowest levels, some very important differences in prostate cancer risk emerged. Overall, very high levels of physical activity were associated with a 16 percent reduction in the risk of developing prostate cancer. Additionally, among the men who spent at least half of their work days being physically active, the risk of prostate cancer was 20 percent lower when compared to men who spent most of their work day sitting down. Specifically, and very importantly, there appeared to be a linear and progressive decrease in prostate cancer risk with each additional 30 minutes of walking or bicycling per day over the course of the adult lifetimes of these men (this linear relationship was noted within a range of 30 to 120 minutes of walking or bicycling per day). Additionally, the risk of developing advanced prostate cancer appeared to be further lessened by regular daily physical activity.

The results of this study mirror those of other high-quality cancer prevention studies for other types of cancer (including, most notably, breast cancer). While clinical research studies such as this one are prone to various forms of bias, and in particular, biases that arise from patients “self-reporting” their personal health and lifestyle information on study questionnaires, the authors of this study appear to have taken very significant and effective steps to reduce the risk of including such biases in the data that they collected from these nearly 46,000 men. Therefore, although a small degree of residual error cannot be completely excluded from the results of this impressive epidemiological study, its findings that progressively higher levels of daily physical activity (and, it must be stressed, throughout one’s lifetime) are associated with a decreasing level of prostate cancer risk are very likely to be valid even in the presence of small errors in the study’s data (if they exist).

Cardiovascular disease remains the most common cause of premature death in most societies. Cancer is the number two cause of premature death when including people of all ages, and the number one cause of premature death below the age of 80 in the United States. Regular exercise, including relatively moderate activities such as brisk walking or bicycling, have been shown to significantly reduce the risk of death due to cardiovascular disease, as well as, increasingly, the risk of developing or dying from multiple different types of cancer. Based upon the results of this well designed and well executed prospective clinical research study, it would appear that prostate cancer can be added to the list of life-threatening illnesses for which the risk can be decreased through regular and frequent physical activity (and both at work and at home).







Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a cancer researcher, an oncology consultant, and a widely published author




'


(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)




Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)





Bookmark and Share



Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:

rwascher@doctorwascher.net




Dr. Wascher's Biography



Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites



http://doctorwascher.com/




Copyright 2007 - 2009

Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS

All rights reserved




Dr. Wascher's Archives:

11-15-2009: Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain


1-8-2009: Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer







Dr. Wascher's Home Page




Saturday, November 21, 2009

Genistein (Soy Isoflavone) & Prostate Cancer




Health Report:


Genistein (Soy Isoflavone) & Prostate Cancer




"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."

By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS



Photo of Dr. Wascher


Updated: 11/22/2009




The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.




GENISTEIN (SOY ISOFLAVONE) & PROSTATE CANCER

While the normal healthy cells within our body are destined to die after a predetermined number of cell divisions (senescence), cancer cells are, essentially, immortal. They divide endlessly, until enough cancer cells have formed to cause a tumor. Similarly the normal cells that line your colon (as well as all of the other estimated 75 trillion cells that make up the human body) never decide to leave the colon and spread to, say, your liver or your lungs. However, colon cancer cells seem to have an overwhelming compulsion to move into blood vessels and lymphatic vessels, and from there, to spread to other distant organs of the body. Once these nefarious pioneers arrive in the liver, the lungs, or in other organs outside of the colon, these metastatic tumor cells then resume their growth cycle, eventually causing metastatic tumors to form. Other types of cancer exhibit the same malignant biology, beginning with invasion through normal tissues, followed by invasion into blood vessels or lymphatic vessels, and ending with the establishment of metastatic colonies of tumors in distant organs and tissues.
This unique, and potentially deadly, biology of cancer cells arises from hundreds, if not thousands, of genetic mutations and other transforming events that occur within cancer cells. As we are still in the infancy of our understanding of the complex biology of cancer cells, we are only beginning to understand the interplay between these hundreds, if not thousands, of aberrations in cancer cell biology.
In most cancer cells, genes that play important roles in normal cell growth and division become corrupted, either due to genetic mutations that cause these “tumor suppressor genes” to become inactivated, or through other so-called “epigenetic” alterations that can also inactivate tumor suppressor genes. One such epigenetic mechanism whereby tumor suppressor genes are commonly inactivated is through “hypermethylation” of the promoter region of the gene. The promoter region of genes can be thought of as a switch that turns on the activation of a gene to produce its specific protein product. Hypermethylation is a process whereby the promoter region of a gene is essentially locked into the “off position.” (When gene hypermethylation occurs, the affected gene is said to be “silenced.”)
Tumor suppressor genes produce proteins that reduce the risk of normal cells becoming cancer cells. Therefore, when key tumor suppressor genes are silenced by hypermethylation, normal (benign) cells may become transformed into malignant cells. This very basic review of the molecular biology of tumor suppressor genes and carcinogenesis is important in order to understand this week’s featured research study.
A tumor suppressor gene known as BTG3 is known to be commonly silenced, by hypermethylation of its promoter region, in cancers of the prostate, breast and kidney. There also is experimental evidence showing that genistein, which is a dietary nutrient found in soybeans and soybean products, can reverse the hypermethylation of multiple different tumor suppressor genes, including BTG3. (Once hypermethylation is reversed, the gene is once again able to produce its cancer-preventing protein.)
A new research study, just published in the journal Cancer, evaluated the effects of genistein on hypermethylated human prostate cancer cells. In this elegant laboratory study, prostate cancer cells were grown in culture dishes, and were tested for hypermethylation of the BTG3 tumor suppressor gene. Once the scientists confirmed that the BTG3 gene was indeed silenced by hypermethylation in these prostate cancer cells, the cells were then treated with genistein. Following additional experiments, the scientists were able to confirm that genistein effectively reversed hypermethylation of the BTG3 tumor suppressor gene. Additionally, a new experimental prostate cancer drug which is being evaluated in ongoing clinical research trials, 5Aza-C, was also tested on the hypermethylated prostate cancer cells, and was found to reverse hypermethylation of the BTG3 tumor suppressor gene, as well.
While it is still a big stretch to assume that the reactivation of the BTG3 tumor suppressor gene in prostate cancer cells growing in a culture dish will translate into clinically meaningful results in human beings, the results of this interesting little study are both intriguing and encouraging. Given that genistein is a natural and generally non-toxic dietary nutrient, it may have certain advantages over the novel prostate cancer drug 5Aza-C (assuming, of course, that ongoing clinical research trials identify a clinical benefit in prostate cancer patients undergoing treatment with 5Aza-C).
The true role of genistein in the prevention and treatment of certain cancers, if any, is not clear at this time. However, the results of this laboratory study add to the growing body of research suggesting that genistein may have clinically significant anti-cancer effects in at least some human cancers.



Disclaimer: As always, my advice to readers is to seek the advice of your physician before making any significant changes in medications, diet, or level of physical activity



Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a cancer researcher, an oncology consultant, and a widely published author



'


(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)


Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)





Bookmark and Share




Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:

rwascher@doctorwascher.net




Dr. Wascher's Biography



Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites





Copyright 2007 - 2009

Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS

All rights reserved





Dr. Wascher's Archives:

11-15-2009: Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain


1-8-2009: Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer






Dr. Wascher's Home Page





Saturday, November 14, 2009

Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain

Health Report:


Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain






"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."

By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS



Photo of Dr. Wascher


Updated: 11/15/2009




The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.





BREAST CANCER TREATMENT & CHRONIC PAIN


Chronic pain following breast cancer treatment is, unfortunately, relatively common, and is a subject that I have previously extensively studied and written about. Most of the clinical data that has been published, thus far, about chronic pain following breast cancer therapy is from the “mastectomy era,” when every patient with breast cancer routinely underwent complete dissection (removal) of the breast and armpit lymph nodes (also known as modified radical mastectomy).

Chronic pain following breast cancer treatment has been estimated to occur, on average, in approximately 25 to 30 percent of patients undergoing axillary (armpit) lymph node dissection, with or without mastectomy, and appears to correlate with the extent of axillary lymph node surgery. Important additional non-surgery factors that have been linked to breast cancer treatment-associated chronic pain syndromes include neuropathic pain caused by chemotherapy and radiation therapy, both of which may be additive to the neurological impairments associated with surgery. As occurs with many other types of chronic pain syndromes, affected breast cancer patients frequently experience some degree of disability that interferes with their ability to lead productive and comfortable lives. Moreover, the added overlay of the emotional stress and anxiety that commonly follows the diagnosis of breast cancer further adds to the impact of chronic pain on the daily lives of patients who have undergone breast cancer treatment.

A newly published public health study of chronic pain following breast cancer treatment appears in this week’s Journal of the American Medical Association. In this large Danish epidemiological study, a nationwide cohort of 3,253 breast cancer survivors, ages 18 to 70 years, was extensively surveyed regarding their breast cancer treatment history and outcomes two to three years following completion of their breast cancer treatment. (It is important to note that all of the women who participated in this study underwent current standard-of-care breast cancer surgery in 2005 or 2006.) The results of this large nationwide Danish breast cancer study were very instructive.

Among these more than 3,000 patients, nearly half (47 percent) reported ongoing pain issues two to three years after completing their breast cancer therapy. Among these 1,543 patients with chronic pain symptoms, 13 percent reported severe pain (or, about 6 percent of all patients participating in this study). Another 39 percent of these 1,543 patients reported moderate pain (18 percent of all study patients). Finally, 48 percent of these 1,543 patients reported mild chronic pain symptoms (23 percent of all study patients). Among this group of patients with chronic pain following completion of breast cancer therapy, 20 percent were sufficiently bothered by their symptoms to seek out medical evaluation and treatment.

Following statistical analysis of the data, several important clinical factors were found to be significantly associated with chronic pain following breast cancer treatment, some of which have also been confirmed by previous studies. Young age was a particularly important risk factor for chronic pain following breast cancer treatment. Patients between the ages of 18 and 39 in this study were almost four times more likely to report chronic post-treatment pain than older women. Radiation therapy was also a significant risk factor (nearly all women who undergo breast-conserving “lumpectomy” will be advised to undergo radiation therapy to reduce the risk of local recurrence of their breast cancer). Women who underwent radiation therapy following breast cancer surgery were almost twice as likely to report chronic pain when compared to the women who did not receive radiation treatment. (Chemotherapy, on the other hand, did not appear to be associated with chronic pain in this large group of breast cancer survivors.) The extent of axillary lymph node surgery was also a predictive factor for chronic pain, as has been shown by previous research (including my own research). Women who had undergone complete removal of their axillary lymph nodes were nearly twice as likely to report chronic pain when compared to patients who had undergone the more limited sentinel lymph node biopsy of their axillary lymph nodes.

A separate risk factor for chronic pain following breast cancer treatment was the presence of chronic pain in other areas of the body prior to undergoing breast cancer treatment, suggesting that women who have preexisting chronic pain symptoms are more likely to develop a new chronic pain syndrome following breast cancer treatment.

In addition to chronic pain, decreased or abnormal sensation of the skin of the chest wall, axilla, and upper arm are well known side effects of breast cancer treatment. In this study, abnormal sensation was also more common among younger patients (5 times more likely than for older women), and following complete axillary lymph node dissection (5 times more likely than for women who did not undergo complete axillary lymph node dissection).

This study adds to an important and growing body of clinical research regarding the prolonged effects modern breast cancer therapy on patients. When contrasted to the rather high incidence of chronic pain syndromes associated with modified radical mastectomy, the recent data on chronic pain and sensory abnormalities in the “modern era” of breast-conserving surgery is much more favorable, although, clearly, there is still a substantial proportion of women who will go on to experience significant long-term symptoms following completion of their breast-conserving treatment.

The links below provide additional information for patients who are interested in this important topic:




Disclaimer: As always, my advice to readers is to seek the advice of your physician before making any significant changes in medications, diet, or level of physical activity

______________________________________________________________

Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a cancer researcher, an oncology consultant, and a widely published author






'




(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)



Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)






Bookmark and Share













Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:


rwascher@doctorwascher.net




Dr. Wascher's Biography





Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites





http://doctorwascher.com/




Copyright 2007 - 2009

Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS

All rights reserved







Dr. Wascher's Archives:

11-8-2009: Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer






Dr. Wascher's Home Page





Monday, November 9, 2009

Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


Health Report:


Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk





"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."

Photo of Dr. Wascher



By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS



Updated: 11/08/2009



The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.




VITAMIN D & BREAST CANCER RISK

As regular readers of this column already know, Vitamin D is a very hot molecule in the world of cancer prevention research. While there have been contradictory results among various clinical research studies regarding the proper role of Vitamin D in the prevention of cancer, there is a growing tally of clinical and laboratory research studies suggesting that higher levels of Vitamin D in the blood may be associated with a lower risk of developing certain cancers. Now, another clinical research trial, just published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, adds further weight to the theory that Vitamin D may, in fact, significantly reduce the risk of developing certain cancers.

This study involved 2,465 women who were scheduled for diagnostic mammograms. Blood levels of Vitamin D were measured in these women prior to performing their mammograms. Of these nearly 2,500 women, 142 were subsequently confirmed to have a breast cancer. An additional 420 women participating in this study were matched with the newly diagnosed breast cancer patients in terms of age, menopausal status, and other factors known to play a role in breast cancer risk. (This group of 420 women turned out not to have breast cancer, following their mammograms, and so they served as a “control group” for this prospective clinical research study.)

As with several previous Vitamin D cancer prevention studies that I have previously reviewed, the results of this study were quite interesting. After analyzing their data, this study’s authors determined that the women with the highest levels of Vitamin D in their blood experienced a 48 percent reduction in the relative risk of being diagnosed with breast cancer when compared to the women with the lowest levels of Vitamin D.

The evidence for a potential protective effect of Vitamin D against cancer is, arguably, strongest for colon and rectal cancer. However, there is a growing body of research hinting at a potential protective effect for Vitamin D against breast cancer, as well. (As is virtually always the case for disease prevention research, however, there have been several research studies that have failed to identify a cancer prevention benefit for Vitamin D.)

Clearly, additional research is necessary to ferret out the appropriate role of Vitamin D in cancer prevention, and large prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical research (with long term follow-up of patients) will be necessary to resolve the conflicting cancer prevention research data with respect to Vitamin D. Meanwhile, given the stronger data for Vitamin D and colorectal cancer prevention (and for cardiovascular disease prevention, as well), Vitamin D remains, essentially, the only vitamin for which there is at least moderate clinical evidence supporting a potential cancer prevention benefit.

As always, before starting a new vitamin supplement, or other nutritional supplement, I encourage patients to see their personal physician first.

Below are links to previous Vitamin D and breast cancer columns that I have recently published:


Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


Disclaimer: As always, my advice to readers is to seek the advice of your physician before making any significant changes in medications, diet, or level of physical activity



Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a widely published author, and a Surgical Oncologist at the Kaiser Permanente healthcare system in Orange County, California





'




(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)

Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)





Bookmark and Share




Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:

rwascher@doctorwascher.net






Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites




http://doctorwascher.com/




Copyright 2007 - 2009

Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS

All rights reserved





Dr. Wascher's Archives:


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer






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