From foodconsumer.org
Too much calcium in blood may increase risk of fatal prostate cancer
By news release
Sep 3, 2008 - 7:59:51 AM
If you like the article, could you please do us a favor? Just tell Google News Services that you like foodconsumer.org included in Google News Services. Inclusion in googlenewsservices means many more people can read articles like this. Thanks.
------
Contact: Jessica Guenzel
jguenzel@wfubmc.edu
336-716-3487
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Too much calcium in blood may increase risk of fatal prostate cancer
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Men who have
too much calcium in their bloodstreams may have an increased risk of
fatal prostate cancer, according to a new analysis from Wake Forest
University School of Medicine and the University of Wisconsin.
"We
show that men in upper range of the normal distribution of serum
calcium subsequently have an almost three-fold increased risk for fatal
prostate cancer," said Gary G. Schwartz, Ph.D., associate professor of
cancer biology and of epidemiology and prevention at Wake Forest, a
part of Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. Such excess
calcium can be lowered, he said.
The research appears in the September issue of
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Co-author
Halcyon G. Skinner of the School of Medicine and Public Health at the
University of Wisconsin stressed there is "little relationship between
calcium in the diet and calcium in serum. So men needn't be concerned
about reducing their ordinary dietary intakes of calcium."
Schwartz
and Skinner analyzed the results of 2,814 men who participated in the
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES-1).
Measurement of the amount of calcium in the bloodstreams was determined
an average of 9.9 years before prostate cancer was diagnosed.
The
researchers focused on the 85 cases of prostate cancer and 25 prostate
cancer deaths among the 2,814 men and divided the group into thirds,
based on the serum calcium level. "Comparing men in the top third with
men in the bottom third, we found a significantly increased hazard for
fatal prostate cancer.
"To our knowledge, this is the first
study to examine prostate cancer risk in relation to serum calcium,"
Schwartz and Skinner wrote. "These results support the hypothesis that
high serum calcium, or a factor strongly associated with it, such as
high serum parathyroid hormone, increases the risk for fatal prostate
cancer."
In an interview, Schwartz said that if the
relationship between serum calcium and prostate cancer "turns out to be
causal, it suggests a means for potentially reducing the risk of fatal
disease through medicines that reduce serum levels of calcium and/or
parathyroid hormone."
He added, "Both calcium and parathyroid hormone are known to promote the growth of prostate cancer cells in the laboratory."
Skinner
said, "The take-home message is that this may offer a simple means to
detect men who are at increased risk of fatal prostate cancer."
Schwartz
said serum calcium ordinarily is tightly regulated by parathyroid
hormone, so there is little variation in an individual's serum calcium
over time. "Calcium is basically the current that runs many of the
functions of your body. Calcium is important for not only neuromuscular
conductions, electrical conductions, but for the conduction of muscles
in your heart."
Too little calcium in blood, less than 7
milligrams per deciliter, can cause uncontrolled muscular convulsions
or contractions. Too much calcium, above 14 milligrams per deciliter,
can cause a coma. "Your body obviously cannot afford to oscillate
between convulsions and coma, so the range of serum calcium is tightly
controlled."
The upper third of NHANES-1 participants had high normal calcium levels, ranging from 9.9 to 10.5 milligrams per deciliter.
"If
confirmed, our study shows that calcium at the high end of normal is
associated with a three-fold increased risk of fatal prostate cancer
later in life," Schwartz said. But unlike well-known risk factors for
prostate cancer such as age, race or family history, which cannot be
altered, "a man's serum calcium levels can be."
Several drugs
already used in patients with high levels of parathyroid hormone, such
as patients with chronic kidney disease, could be used to reduce
calcium and/or parathyroid hormone in the blood, he said.
Measurements
of serum calcium are routinely collected and are part of most medical
visits. Thus, a physician can readily determine whether a man's serum
calcium level is at the high end of normal.
"What is
particularly exciting – if this study is replicated, and attempts to do
so are already in progress – is that it suggests that a man may reduce
his risk of fatal prostate cancer by lowering serum levels of calcium
and/or parathyroid hormone," he said.
###
Media Relations Contacts: Jessica Guenzel, jguenzel@wfubmc.edu, (336) 716-3487, Bonnie Davis, bdavis@wfubmc.edu or Shannon Koontz, shkoontz@wfubmc.edu
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center (www.wfubmc.edu)
is an academic health system comprised of North Carolina Baptist
Hospital, Brenner Children's Hospital, Wake Forest University
Physicians, and Wake Forest University Health Sciences, which operates
the university's School of Medicine and Piedmont Triad Research Park.
The system comprises 1,154 acute care, rehabilitation and long-term
care beds and has been ranked as one of "America's Best Hospitals" by
U.S. News & World Report since 1993. Wake Forest Baptist is ranked
32nd in the nation by America's Top Doctors for the number of its
doctors considered best by their peers. The institution ranks in the
top third in funding by the National Institutes of Health and fourth in
the Southeast in revenues from its licensed intellectual property.