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Alcohol, diabetes, hepatitis up
liver cancer risk
New York -
Heavy alcohol use, diabetes, and viral hepatitis combine
synergistically to raise the risk of developing liver cancer,
according to a new report.
As lead investigator Dr. Jian-Min
Yuan told Reuters Health, "Physicians should be aware of the increased
risk of liver cancer for their patients who are obese and possess
additional risk factors such as hepatitis virus infection and heavy
alcohol consumption."
Yuan from the University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, and colleagues examined viral and non-viral
risk factors for liver cancer among 295 patients with the disease and
435 matched cancer-free "controls."
As expected, hepatitis B virus and
hepatitis C virus infections were both risk factors for liver cancer,
the authors report, with hepatitis C exerting a stronger effect.
Compared with non-drinkers, moderate
drinkers actually had a 40 percent lower risk of liver cancer, but
heavy alcohol consumption significantly increased the risk. In
addition, a history of diabetes increased the risk of liver cancer
almost three-fold.
Heavy drinking in those with diabetes
raised the likelihood of developing liver cancer more than 17-fold,
the team reports, while the combinations of viral hepatitis and
diabetes or viral hepatitis and heavy alcohol consumption each
increased the risk for liver cancer about 48 times.
"These factors," the researchers
conclude in the medical journal Cancer, "are likely contributors to
the rising incidence of liver cancer in the U.S."
Screening people with these risk
factors, Yuan added "will help in early detection of liver cancer, and
liver cancer in the early stage is manageable and even treatable." --
Reuters
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