Breast cancer - growing danger for overweight men and women
Talk about
breast cancer and naturally, people think of the disease that is the number one
cancer among women. But the truth is that breast cancer is on the rise among
both women and men, and researchers think the national obesity crisis may be to
blame.
With two-thirds of Americans now overweight, we can probably
expect more obesity-related cancers. But on the brighter side, weight problems
are extremely treatable, even preventable. So to the extent overweight is
contributing to cancer, this is one risk factor we may actually have some real
control over.
Just how we go about getting that control appears to be
critical, though. Even among the most motivated of people, we see that very few
are successful in independent efforts to lose weight, even if their life depends
on it. And among cancer patients, it clearly does.
Consider some of the
numbers: breast cancer in women increased by 52 percent from 1973 to 1998.
Part of that increase can be accounted for by better detection, because
mammography is much more available than it was 30 years ago. But use of
post-menopausal estrogen supplements has also become routine, and these have
been clearly linked to cancer in women. But in that same period, incidence of
breast cancer among men increased by 26 percent, and that’s without the ingested
estrogen and without the extra detection offered by mammography, since men
typically don’t pursue that procedure.
So what else is going on? Experts
say the increase in breast cancer in both sexes seems to closely track the
increase in American obesity, giving rise to the theory that the obesity crisis
may actually be to blame for the boom in breast cancer.
Obesity has been
shown to have a clear relationship with some cancers, but not with others. For
instance, there does not appear to be any correlation between overweight and
prostate cancer in men. Or sometimes, the relation is clear, but the reasons
aren’t. Hence, researchers are looking at whether acid reflux in overweight
people might account for their greater incidence of esophogeal
cancer.
But with breast cancer, there is at least one known culprit: all
that excess estrogen. Fatty tissue produces estrogen, in both men and
women.
Studies of menopausal women make the case most clearly. Before
menopause, the ovaries are the primary source of estrogen. But after menopause,
when the ovaries have retired from that duty, fatty tissues are the main
estrogen source.
Among postmenopausal women, estrogen levels are 50 to
100 percent higher in heavy women, compared to those of healthy weight. Similar
ratios are found among men.
And when estrogen-sensitive tissues get more
estrogen exposure, that leads to more growth of estrogen-responsive breast
tumors.
Researchers figure that between 11,000 and 18,000 breast cancer
deaths per year could be avoided in American women over age 50, if they could
maintain a healthy body weight throughout their adult lives. There are no
similar guesstimates for men, because while breast cancer is a growing problem
for men, there is little research on mortality rates among males, and it is
still less of a concern than heart disease or prostate and colon
cancer.
But obesity puts men at higher risk for these diseases, as well,
so the imperative is to drop that excess weight, or at least some of it.
There’s abundant evidence that even a minor weight loss reaps huge rewards for
health. So how do you do it? It’s tough, especially if you’re an older
person, and the average age of diagnosis for breast cancer is 62 among women,
and 67 among men.
Motivation counts, but the research shows that it’s not
enough. People need help. For instance, who would be more motivated to lose
weight than a heavy person who had already survived cancer?
An overweight
survivor has a double whammy when it comes to risk of recurrence, but a study
published earlier this year in Obesity Research said that even among that
motivated group, people left to their own devices, or those who only had a group
program did not achieve much weight loss.
This is no surprise to those of
us who have treated obesity for years. We see people who have tried diet after
diet, joined gym and club and fellowship alike, all to no avail. But when they
are treated with a comprehensive diet and lifestyle modification program that
has been designed specifically for them, things change.
In this latest
study, the researchers were pretty unequivocal, concluding that “for breast
cancer survivors to lose weight to reduce risk factors, intervention is
necessary. Of the different intervention regimens, individualized counseling
combined with attending weekly … meetings was most effective….”
When
you’re facing a chocolate éclair, death is perhaps too abstract an idea, even if
you’ve only narrowly escaped it. Without some real retraining, it’s hard to
equate even the greasiest burger with a lethal tumor. But professional support
makes all the difference.
For instance, I’ve been tracking insulin levels
in weight management patients for years, because we know that high insulin
levels indicate a metabolic abnormality that leads to diabetes and weight gain.
Now recent research shows that elevated insulin levels are also a risk factor
for breast cancer recurrence.
Yet very
specific changes in lifestyle and diet can significantly reduce insulin levels
in days to weeks, immediately reducing those disease risks. The disembodied
threat of disease is sometimes hard for people to get their arms around, but
when patients can look at their lab results and see how their behavioral changes
directly affect their blood chemistry, it hits home.
What happens
to patients’ bodies on the inside as they lose weight is more important than the
changes they get on the outside, but even at the best health clubs or peer
support groups, they won’t have an opportunity to see that.
It’s inspiring
to see how people embrace a fitness and weight-loss program when they have more
than just a bathroom scale to tell them that it’s working. Consistent and
reliable guidance is essential because nobody goes from obese to healthy
overnight. It takes time.
But cancer takes time, too, so the race is
on. With the proper help, this is a race both men and women have great odds of
winning.
THROUGH THICK & THIN
Breast cancer is a growing risk for both men and women, and
it’s a cancer for which the obesity link has been clearly established.
Fat produces excess estrogen; excess estrogen produces breast cancer.
And in the reverse, weight loss reduces cancer risk. The data are
clear, but it doesn’t make the task any easier. What does make
it easier, and more successful, is professional help-—-and the sooner
the better.
Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D. is a board certified Bariatric Physicians,
the medical specialty of weight management, and a board certified
Family Physician. She specializes in lifetime weight management
at the Cederquist Medical Wellness Center, her Naples, FL private
practice.
Dr. Cederquist is a contributing
medical editor for NBC-2 News, a trustee of the American Society
Of Bariatric Physicians and the author of " Helping Your Overweight
Child - A Family Guide", www.Amazon.Com or by
Calling Toll-Free 1-800-431-1579.
If you are interested in a delicious,
doctor-designed, foolproof plan for fast and healthy weight loss
please visit Dr. Cederquist's Diet-To-Your-Door program by clicking here.