Sign up for our complimentary
weekly e-journal

Main Newsletter
Mastery Series
Therapy Series
 
Bookmark and Share | Print Article | Items for the Week Previous | All Articles This Week | Next
This article originally posted 26 July, 2012 and appeared in  ObesityDiabetes in Children and AdolescentsOncologyIssue 636

Besides Diabetes and CVD, Obese Children Will Have 50% Higher Risk of Colon Cancer

The newest reason for doing everything possible to reduce childhood obesity names certain cancers as risks associated with a high BMI....

Advertisement

Obesity in childhood has a direct link with bladder and urinary tract (urothelial), and colorectal cancers in adulthood, warn Israeli researchers.

Childhood obesity is associated with all sorts of immediate health problems, including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, breathing and joint problems, along with an increased risk of developing diabetes and heart disease. This study set out to examine the relationship between childhood obesity and future diagnoses of urothelial, or bladder, and colorectal cancers.

Researchers at Tel Aviv University gathered the health information of 1.1 million males collected by the Israeli Defense Forces and then linked this medical data to the National Cancer Registry. They looked specifically at the rates of urothelial and colorectal cancer over a follow-up period of 18 years in those who were obese, meaning that they had a body mass index (BMI) in the 85th percentile and above, at age 17. Adjustments were made for year of birth, level of education, and religiosity.

Those whose BMI placed them in the range of obesity in adolescence had a 1.42% greater chance of developing urothelial or colorectal cancers in adulthood.

While these results only tell us about the incidences of two specific types of cancer, Ari Shamiss, one of the doctors involved in the study, has indicated that he is currently researching connections between childhood obesity and other cancers in the hopes of uncovering other connections. "We still need to learn whether obesity is directly causing the high risk of cancer, and, perhaps most essentially, whether losing weight is effective -- and if so, how much and when -- in lowering it.

In conclusion, childhood obesity is associated with a 50% higher risk of urothelial or colorectal cancers.

"Overweight in Adolescence is Related to Increased Risk of Future Urothelial Cancer,"  published in the journal Obesity. 

Advertisement


 

Bookmark and Share | Print | Category | Home

This article originally posted 26 July, 2012 and appeared in  ObesityDiabetes in Children and AdolescentsOncologyIssue 636

Past five issues: Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 141 | Issue 681 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 140 | Issue 680 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 139 |

2013 Most Popular Articles:

Mortality Risk in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes
Posted May 23, 2013
Bacteria in the Gut Improves the Management of Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes
Posted May 23, 2013
Hypoglycemia Treatment and Prevention Related to Physical Activity
Posted May 31, 2013
Simvastatin Can Reduce the Benefits of Exercise in Active Adults
Posted May 23, 2013
Scientist Use Bone Marrow Stem Cells to Cure Type 1 Diabetes
Posted June 06, 2013
Diabetes Epidemic Growing
Posted May 23, 2013
Co-Q10 May Offset Risk of Diabetes with Statin Use
Posted May 23, 2013
Diabetes Increases Cancer Risk by 20 Percent
Posted May 16, 2013
Artificial Sweeteners May Affect Blood Glucose Levels and Insulin Response
Posted June 06, 2013
Pros and Cons of Incretin-Based Therapies
Posted May 30, 2013

See more most popular…


Browse by Feature Writer & Article Category.
A. Lee Dellon, MD | Aaron I. Vinik, MD, PhD, FCP, MACP | Beverly Price | Charles W Martin, DD | Derek Lowe, PhD | Dr. Bernstein | Dr. Brian Jakes, Jr. | Dr. Fred Pescatore | Dr. Tom Burke, Ph.D | Eric S. Freedland | Evan D. Rosen | Ginger Kanzer-Lewis | Greg Milliger | Kristina Sandstedt | Laura Plunkett | Leonard Lipson, M.A. | Louis H. Philipson | Maria Emanuel Ryan, DDS, PhD | Marilyn Porter, RD, CDE | Melissa Diane Smith | Michael R. Cohen, RPh, MS, ScD, FASHP | Paul Chous, M.A., OD | Philip A. Wood PhD | R. Keith Campbell, Professor, B.Pharm, MBA, CDE | Sheri R. Colberg PhD | Sherri Shafer | Stanley Schwartz, MD, FACP, FACE | Steve Pohlit | Steven V. Edelman, M.D. | Timothy S. Hollingshead |
 
Diabetes In Control Advertisers
 
Cast Your Vote
If the FDA relaxes prescribing restrictions on Avandia, will you recommend it?

Navigate Diabetes In Control



Search Articles On Diabetes In Control