High blood sugar tied to increased cancer risk Thu Mar 15, 2007 8:27PM
EDT
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Results of a study involving nearly 65,000
people point to an association between cancer and abnormally high blood
sugar levels.

These results "have obvious implications for lifestyle guidance, as it
is well known what factors cause blood glucose increases," Dr. Par
Stattin from Umea University Medical Center, Sweden noted in comments to
Reuters Health.

By avoiding excessive fat and other dietary risk factors, and by getting
regular exercise, "you can decrease your risk of cardiovascular disease,
diabetes -- and cancer," he added.

Type 2 diabetes is associated with an increased risk of liver, pancreas,
colon cancer, as well as other cancers, Stattin and colleagues note in
the journal Diabetes Care. However, less is known about the effect on
cancer risk associated with moderately elevated blood sugar levels among
non-diabetic subjects.
To investigate further, the researchers examined data from 31,304 men
and 33,293 women who participated in a larger study and had glucose
(blood sugar) measurements available. In total 2,478 cases of cancer
were identified in this group.
In women, the total cancer risk increased with rising blood sugar
levels. The relative risk of cancer was 26 percent higher for women with
the highest fasting blood sugar compared with women with the lowest
fasting blood sugar.

Adjustment for errors in measurement further increased the relative risk
of cancer for women with abnormally high blood sugar levels.

Overall, there was no significant association between total cancer risk
and blood sugar measurements in men

However, for men and women, high fasting glucose was significantly
associated with an increased risk of cancer of the pancreas,
endometrium, urinary tract and malignant melanoma.

These associations were independent of body weight.

These findings, the authors say, provide "further evidence for an
association between abnormal glucose metabolism and cancer."

SOURCE: Diabetes Care March 2007.

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