Healthy Weight Loss May Also Cut Your
Cancer Risk
New study found decrease in inflammation warning signals.
Moderate weight loss
reduces levels of inflammation that have been tied to certain cancers, at least
in postmenopausal women, a new study suggests.
According to the findings,
older women who lost at least 5 percent of their body weight through diet alone
or diet plus exercise showed significant reductions in key inflammatory blood
markers such as C-reactive protein and interleukin-6.
In addition to risk for
heart disease, elevated levels of these markers have also been associated with
increased risk for several cancers, including breast, colon, lung and
endometrial cancer.
The findings appear May 1
in the journal Cancer Research.
"Our findings support
weight loss through calorie reduction and increased exercise as a means for
reducing inflammatory biomarkers and thereby potentially reducing cancer risk
in overweight and obese postmenopausal women," said researchers led by Dr.
Anne McTiernan, director of the Prevention Center at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center, in Seattle.
Aiming to lose 10 percent
of their body weight, the women were either placed on a calorie-restricted
diet, asked to participate in moderate-to vigorous-aerobic exercise for 45
minutes a day for five days a week, or told to do both.
During the one-year study,
C-reactive protein levels went down by about 36 percent in the diet-alone group
and by 42 percent in the diet and exercise group. Interleukin-6 levels
decreased by about 23 percent in the diet group and 24 percent in the diet and
exercise group, the study showed. There were greater reductions in these levels
seen among women who lost at least 5 percent of their body weight. Exercise
alone did not affect levels of inflammation markers.
There was no information on
which, if any, of the 438 women in the study went on to develop cancer. But a
40 percent reduction in C-reactive protein "could be expected to reduce
breast, endometrial and other cancer risk in postmenopausal women," the
study authors said.
Dr. Louis Aronne, founder
and director of the Comprehensive Weight Control Program at New
York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, in New York City,
said: "This adds to the body of evidence showing that with small weight
loss, fat cells shrink and inflammatory hormones go down. There are many things
besides coronary disease that depend on inflammation."
Dr. Mitchell Roslin, chief
of obesity surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, agreed.
"Obesity induces a chronic state of inflammation that may also be the
cause of metabolic diseases like type 2 diabetes and certain cancers," he
said. "Obesity is driving this inflammatory state, and when we reverse it,
we also reverse the process that causes some cancers and diabetes."
More information
Learn about the health benefits of moderate weight
loss
at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
(SOURCES: Louis Aronne,
M.D., founder and director, Comprehensive Weight Control Program, New
York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York City;
Mitchell Roslin, M.D., chief of obesity surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York
City; May 1, 2012, Cancer Research)
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