Islamabad, Jan 20 : Men treated with hormone-based therapy for
prostate cancer faced a 30 percent to 40 percent higher risk of colorectal
cancer, compared to patients who did not receive this treatment, according to a
new study.
The study looked at use of androgen deprivation therapy, a common
type of treatment for prostate cancer that involves blocking the male hormone
testosterone through either surgical removal of the testicles or a series of
injections. It's been shown to benefit men with advanced cancers, but its
benefit for less-advanced disease is unclear. Still, more than half a million
men in the United States currently receive this therapy.
Researchers
looked at data from 107,859 men aged 67 and older with prostate cancer,
identified through the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results and Medicare
linked database, which provides information about older adults with newly
diagnosed cancer. Results of the study were published in the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute.
The study is the first to link androgen
deprivation therapy for prostate cancer to an increased risk of colorectal
cancer. The researchers found that the risk increased the longer a man received
androgen deprivation therapy. Patients who had their testicles removed, a
procedure called orchiectomy, had the highest rates of colorectal
cancer.
Overall, the risk of colorectal cancer was still low -- less than
1 percent per year even among orchiectomy patients. But any increased risk
should be carefully considered when using androgen deprivation therapy in cases
when its benefit is not clear, the researchers say.
"Androgen deprivation
therapy still continues to be used in situations where there are not
evidence-based studies showing its benefit. When androgen deprivation therapy is
clearly known to be beneficial, people should not shy away from using it. But
where there's not solid evidence, this is potentially another harm," says lead
study author Vahakn B. Shahinian, M.D., M.S., assistant professor of internal
medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School and a member of the U-M
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Shahinian stresses that androgen deprivation
therapy can be lifesaving for certain men with prostate cancer, and those
patients should not hesitate to use it. The study authors suggest that continued
routine preventive care, including colorectal cancer screening, is important
during prostate cancer treatment.
Ends
SA/EN
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Prostate cancer treatment linked to higher rate of colon cancer
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