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kebaldwin
Tue, Oct-16-07, 07:53
Obesity biggest risk for colon cancer in women
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor
Mon Oct 15, 4:24 PM ET

Obesity is the single strongest risk factor for colon cancer in women, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.

They found that women with precancerous polyps in the colon were more likely to be obese than women without these lesions. And obesity more strongly predicted who would have these growths than smoking or having a family history of colon cancer.

"Of all the risk factors -- age, family history, smoking -- the most potent risk factor was being obese," Dr. Joseph Anderson of Stony Brook University in New York, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

"One in five lesions may be attributable to obesity."

Colorectal cancer is the third-leading cause of cancer death in the United States. It will affect 153,000 Americans in 2007, according to the American Cancer Society, and will kill 52,000.

Family history, smoking and diet are all linked with colorectal cancer but Anderson said experts are still struggling to identify the causes that underlie most cases.

Doctors can use colonoscopy, in which a tiny camera is threaded up into the colon, to not only detect precancerous polyps but to remove them, thus often preventing cancer.

Anderson and colleagues examined the records of 1,252 women who underwent colonoscopy, classifying patients by age, smoking history, family history of colorectal cancer, and body mass index or BMI. Obesity was defined as having a BMI of 30 or higher.

Then they looked to see who had the most polyps, and who was more likely to have them at all.

"BMI was a huge risk factor. And it's a risk factor that's increasing," Anderson said.

BMI was not linked to the risk of colon cancer for men, Anderson and colleagues found.

"We need to counsel people on things like losing weight and staying thin," said Anderson, who presented his findings to a meeting in Philadelphia of the American College of Gastroenterology.

"Given the increasing number of obese patients in the United States, identifying them as high risk may have important screening implications," he added.

Why obesity might be linked with colon cancer is unclear, said Anderson.

"Probably the leading factors are going to be insulin and insulin-like growth factor," he said. People who have more visceral fat -- the fat around the internal organs that is associated with the worst effects of being overweight -- also have higher levels of insulin and insulin-like growth factor.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071015/hl_nm/cancer_colon_obesity_dc;_ylt=Apk8BEJKeBgA3ZpqIwbdCtDVJRIF

kebaldwin
Tue, Oct-16-07, 07:54
Let's see - what do obesity and cancer have in common. It couldn't be all the blood sugar! It must be the fat from going to fast food places. (extreme sarcasim)

Zei
Tue, Oct-16-07, 17:59
Maybe it's the hyperinsulemia. My blood sugar is normal, but I'll bet my insulin has issues after several gestational diabetes pregnancies, two diabetic family members, one with colon cancer. My body really resists giving up any significant amount of weight at this point, but I stick with low carb regardless with exercise, literally trying to outrun diabetes before it catches me.