|
Smoking, drinking lower odds of
surviving cancer
New York -
Smoking and heavy alcohol use may curb the likelihood of
survival among men diagnosed with cancer, researchers from South Korea
report.
There is some evidence that these
"cancer risk factors" boost mortality among cancer patients, Dr. Young
Ho Yun of the National Cancer Center in Goyang and colleagues note.
But to date no one has investigated how having these risk factors
before cancer is diagnosed influences survival afterwards.
Yun's
team looked at data from 14,578 male cancer patients, all of whom had
data on their pre-diagnosis health risk behaviors on record. They were
followed for an average of about nine years after their cancer
diagnosis.
Men who had been smokers were at
greater risk of dying from any type of cancer than non-smoking cancer
patients, the researchers found. There is evidence that smokers are
less likely to undergo cancer screening tests such as colonoscopy, so
they may be diagnosed with cancer later on when it is more difficult
to treat, the researchers note. Cigarette smoking itself, they add,
could also make tumors grow more aggressively.
Heavy drinkers were more likely to
die from head and neck or liver cancer than non-drinkers with either
type of cancer, and the risk rose in tandem with the amount of alcohol
consumed. Drinking alcohol may increase tumor aggressiveness, the
researchers say, or make people less likely to comply with treatment
recommendations.
Men who were resistant to the effects
of the blood-sugar-processing hormone insulin, which is a warning sign
of diabetes, were also more likely to die after a cancer diagnosis.
However, the researchers found,
people with a high body mass index (a measure of weight in relation to
height) were at lower risk of death from cancer overall, and from head
and neck or esophageal cancer specifically. Heavier patients might
fare better after a cancer diagnosis because they are better nourished
and thus more able to survive the rigors of treatment, the researchers
note.
"Our findings suggest that groups at
high risk of cancer need to be educated continually to improve their
health behaviors -- not only to prevent cancer, but also to improve
prognosis," the team concludes. --
Reuters Limited
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|