Testosterone Levels Early In Life May Determine Later Risk Of Prostate Cancer
Unregistered User
If this is not your name, click here.
Contact Us | Order Now | Journals | Bookstore | Register a colleague
 
  SEARCH  
News
Bookstore
Medline
The Web
Meetings & Congresses
Complete Doctor's Guide
 


 EXPLORE :
 news  All News
 webcasts All Webcasts
 All cases All Cases
 Meetings All Meetings & Congresses
 Medical All Medical Resources

top





New drugs / indications

English Dictionary

Medical Dictionary

Thesaurus



Warning | Privacy | Awards



 Favourite Journals 

Click here to choose your favourite journals


 Favourite Sites 

Click here to choose your favourite sites


 Languages 



  




Testosterone Levels Early In Life May Determine Later Risk Of Prostate Cancer

DURHAM, NC. -- October 16, 1997 -- Duke University Medical Center researchers have found preliminary evidence suggesting a man's lifetime risk of prostate cancer may be linked to the amount of male hormone testosterone circulating in his body as early as puberty or even in utero, although direct evidence of this link remains to be shown.

The two possible risk factors they found -- high free testosterone levels in adulthood and a small shoulder span in relation to body size -- appear to be unrelated to one another. However, they are both tied to hormone levels at various stages of development, said Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, associate professor of surgery at Duke and lead author of two parts of a study that produced the findings.

While doctors won't be able to predict who will get the disease based on these two factors alone, the results suggest that free hormone levels and shoulder span could be benchmarks for determining who is at greater risk for the disease, Demark-Wahnefried said. Free testosterone refers to a type of hormone that is not bound to a protein and thus can freely enter cells throughout the body.

"We have to look at how hormone levels at different points in time actually determine the risk of prostate cancer," she said. "It is hypothesized that hormone levels throughout life -- ranging from in utero to old age -- drive such events as skeletal and muscle formation, fat deposition, baldness and that these events may provide the initial stimuli and promotion for prostate cancer.

"By studying the tell-tale signs that hormones leave on the body, our goal was to clearly separate those men at risk for prostate cancer from those who are not."

Demark-Wahnefried's research set out to measure the link between prostate cancer and factors such as height, weight, musculature and baldness -- all of which are related to hormones. The two-year, blinded, case-controlled study compared a group of 159 men with prostate cancer to a control group of 156 men who had come to the urology clinic for prostate screenings and other concerns such as kidney stones. Subjects were aged 50 to 70 years.

In the first phase of the study, Demark-Wahnefried and her colleagues at the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center found nearly a two-fold increase in the risk of prostate cancer among men with high free testosterone levels.

While the link between testosterone and prostate cancer has been made before, previous studies have measured total testosterone, a less active form of the hormone that is bound to specific protein and thus cannot enter the cells.

The researchers also found a link between high testosterone levels and vertex or top of head baldness. However, baldness was not linked to prostate cancer in the study subjects, probably because baldness is as much related to age as it is to other factors like testosterone, she said.

Demark-Wahnefried theorizes baldness at a younger age, perhaps at 40, could be used to predict the later risk of prostate cancer, a theory she plans to study next.

The part of the study that looked at baldness, testosterone levels and prostate cancer is published in the September/October issue of the Journal of Andrology.

In the next phase of the study, published in the September issue of the Journal of Nutrition and Cancer, researchers found men with prostate cancer were more likely to have a narrower shoulder span in proportion to their overall body size, a trait earlier studies have shown to be determined during puberty.

Demark-Wahnefried said those earlier studies, although quite limited in their sample size, showed men who go through puberty later have a broader shoulder span than men who go through puberty early. She said this finding suggests that hormone levels have a direct influence on shoulder span.

While the difference in shoulder span was less than a centimeter, Demark-Wahnefried said it was the only physical factor she studied that was significantly associated with prostate cancer.

"Shoulder span may provide us with a benchmark of past hormonal and/or nutritional status and help elucidate the etiology of this disease," she said.

While researchers have long believed prostate cancer is linked to male hormone levels, Demark-Wahnefried said the existing research has yielded conflicting results, similar to the controversy surrounding estrogen as a risk factor for breast cancer.

The current studies provide strong evidence that risk of prostate cancer is, in fact, influenced by hormonal events that occur much earlier in life, such as the formation of skeletal frame, she said. However, Demark-Wahnefried said these events may originate in utero and continue to manifest themselves at developmental milestones throughout a man's life.

E-mail this page
to a friend or colleague!
To print,
use this version




Any question regarding a medical diagnosis, treatment, referral, drug availability or pricing should be directed to either a licensed physician or to the product's manufacturer.

If you have any technical questions or other concerns about this site, feel free to contact us at webmaster@docguide.com.

All contents Copyright (c) 1995- Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.


Employment opportunities | Partnering opportunities