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Cancer and Obesity: Is there a Prevention Connection?

Cancer and Obesity: Is there a Prevention Connection?. Yvonne Collins, MD, FACOG Gynecologic Oncologist Advocate Medical Group Obesity Awareness Symposium: 2012 Yvonne.collins_md@advocatehealth.com. Disclosure. I have no relevant conflicts of interest. Objectives.

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Cancer and Obesity: Is there a Prevention Connection?

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  1. Cancer and Obesity: Is there a Prevention Connection? Yvonne Collins, MD, FACOG Gynecologic Oncologist Advocate Medical Group Obesity Awareness Symposium: 2012 Yvonne.collins_md@advocatehealth.com

  2. Disclosure • I have no relevant conflicts of interest

  3. Objectives • Review obesity statistics • Review cancers directly associated with obesity • Discuss mechanisms of obesity and cancer • Discuss the health outcomes related to weight control and weight cancer • Explain obesity reduction efforts

  4. Prevalence of Obesity • Greater than two thirds of US adults were overweight or obese by 2000 • About 25% of Americans are obese as defined by a BMI of 30 > kg/M2 301.6 million people world wide are obese • Significant health risks are related to obesity

  5. Obesity Trends* Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS,1990, 2000, 2010 (*BMI 30, or about 30 lbs. overweight for 5’4” person) 2000 1990 2010 No Data <10% 10%–14% 15%–19% 20%–24% 25%–29% ≥30%

  6. Obesity no longer limited to the US • 1.6 billion people world wide are at least overweight • Almost 25% of people in the UK are overweight or obese. • Even Asian countries are noticing and increase • One can be obese yet malnourished

  7. How is Obesity Assessed? • BMI • Weight • Weight in earlier life • Adult weight gain • Waist circumference; WHR • Skin folds • Body fat (DXA, BIA) • Intramuscular fat (CT scan)

  8. Background By 2020, 75% of the US will be overweight OECD Report, September 2010

  9. Body Fatness, and the Risk of Cancer AICR/WCRF 2007

  10. Background Fair AM, Montgomery K. Methods Mol Biol. 2009;472:57-88.

  11. Impact Factors

  12. Candidate Mechanisms • Insulin and insulin like growth factor axis • Sex steroids • Adipokines • Obesity induced hypoxia • Shared genetic susceptibility • Migrating adipose stromal cells

  13. High Insulin Levels are an adverse prognostic factor associated with: • Breast cancer • Colon cancer • Prostate cancer

  14. Sex Hormones • Higher rates of conversion of androgenic precursors to estradiol • Increased aromatase activity through adipose tissue • Data indicates that estrogen is both mitogenic and mutagenic

  15. Endogenous Hormones and Breast Cancer Collaborative Group (EHBCCG) • Nine prospective studies • Risk of breast cancer increases at least two fold with increased levels of sex steroids • DHEA • DHEAS • Androstendione • Estrone • Estradiol • Testsosterone

  16. Estrogen stimulation in endometrial cancer • Increases cellular proliferation • Inhibits apoptosis • Induces synthesis of IGF-1 • Progesterone induces synthesis of IGFBP-I which inhibits IGF-I

  17. Effect of obesity on hormones

  18. Obesity, Hormones and Endometrial Cancer

  19. Leptin • Leptin deficient mice overfeed and rapidly become hyperinsulinemic • Long arm of leptin receptor (LRb) activates • PI3 kinase • MAPK • STAT (signal transduce and activator transcription) • C-fos

  20. Adiponectin • Most abundant adipokine • Important insulin sensitizing agent • Inverse association of adiponecitn concentrations and cancer • Antiproliferative effects • ERK • ERK1 • MAPK kinases • Induces p53 and Bax

  21. Obesity Related Hypoxia • Adipose tissue hypoxia is a key factor in the development of insulin resistance • Regulation of chronic inflammation • Reduced adiponectin • Increased leptin • High levels of tumor hypoxia correlate with high mortality • HIF-1 alpha is associated with poor prognosis

  22. Obesity related hypoxia • White adipose tissue in obese mice is more hypoxic than in lean mice (15.2 mmHg versus 47.9 mmHg • Ye et al Am J Phys. Endo Met 2007 • Low oxygen concentrations have been associated with stimulation of melanocytes and development of melanoma • Through the AKT, ras/raf, PI-3-Kinase pathways • Bedogni Cancer Cell 2005

  23. Shared Genetic Susceptibility • Genome wide studies show at least 15 loci associated with obesity • Cancer genome maps are derived from a number of parallel genome wide associated regions • Overlap may exist for breast on 11p and 16q • Hofker et al Nat Genetic 2009

  24. Obesity related inflammatory markers • Increased C-reactive protein • Activation of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase • Activation of IkB kinase beta increases with adiposity • Increased activated macrophage infiltration • Now recognized as a mechanism of insulin resistance

  25. Mechanical Markers • Hypertension • Acid reflux • Increased iodine uptake

  26. Breast Cancer • Increased postmenopausal breast cancer • Decreased premenopausal cancer • Increased weight gain 18-50 increases risk of breast cancer after menopause

  27. Colon Cancer • For men, increased BMI = increased risk • The strongest association with abdominal obesity (waist circumference) • Also, increased BMI is associated with rectal cancer

  28. Esophageal Cancer • Esophageal adenocarcinoma is 2X’s higher in those who are overweight and obese • Associated link with gastroesophageal reflux and Barrett’s esophagus • Obesity exacerbates esophageal inflammation

  29. Prostate Cancer • Pooled data: obesity is associated with a slight increased risk • Obese men have more aggressive cancers • Linked to hormone and growth factors (esp IGF-1

  30. Other Cancers • Obesity is associated with renal cell cancer • Related to high insulin levels • Associated with thyroid cancer • Mechanism is unknown • Associated with gallbladder cancer • Possible mechanism related to frequency of gallstones

  31. So what do we know thus farrelated to GYN cancers? • Obesity is NOT clearly associated with: • Vaginal cancer • Vulvar cancer • Obesity is possibly associated with: • Cervical Cancer • Ovarian cancer -premenopausal

  32. Obesity and Adult Weight Gain • Strongly associated with endometrial cancer

  33. Endometrial Cancer • Most common gynecologic cancer • We perceive it to be associated with obesity • Increasing incidence • Hormone related cancer

  34. Obesity • Strongest risk factor for endometrial cancer1 • RR 4.0 - BMI>32 kg/m2 • RR 6.0 - BMI>35 kg/m2 • Elevated endogenous estrogens • “Hyper-estrogenic” state does not account for all cases2 • Other obesity-related factors may contribute to increased risk for endometrial cancer 1Brinton et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1992 2Potishman et al. JNCI 1996

  35. Progression of the Endometrium to Cancer • 23% of complex atypical hyperplasia (CAH) progresses to endometrial cancer • Excess of estrogen and lack of progesterone causes abnormal proliferative drive • Subset of aggressive histologies that do not follow this progression pathway Normal Complex atypical hyperplasia (CAH) Grade 1 Endometrial cancer

  36. ACS Estimates Endometrial Cancer: Annual Incidence and Mortality *250% increase American Cancer Society 2008

  37. Goal: Prevention of deaths 40,000+ cases 7,000+ deaths 34,000 endometrioid 3,710 28,800 G1-2 1,820 5,200 G 3 1,890 4,000 UPSC 2,800 1,200 Clear Cell 560 800 Sarcoma/CarcinoSarc 400 How do we identify these patients and prevent death?

  38. OBESITY • Estrogen •  Insulin • Adipokines Diet Exercise Hormone therapy Chemoprevention Background Complex Atypical Hyperplasia & Endometrial Adenocarcinoma Healthy Endometrium

  39. Prevention of Obesity-associated Endometrial cancer • Oral contraceptives • Progestins (including IUD w/Progestin) • Weight loss • Bariatric surgery • ? Metformin

  40. Implications Employment/ Support system/ Cancer therapies Lifestyle Interventions diet, physical activity, weight, sleep, etc. • Fatigue • Intake • Caffeine, sugar Changing hormonal environment ↓ Hormones and activity Poor Sleep ↓ Muscle Mass ↓ Metabolic Rate ↓ Energy Needs Reversal or Primary prevention Improved QOL Weight control Weight Gain, Reduced physical function Co-morbidity Reduced QOL Increased Mortality

  41. Implications: Obesity- related Co-morbidity • Cardiovascular • Neurologic • Psychiatric • Pulmonary • Vascular • Gastrointestinal • Genitourinary • Metabolic • Musculoskeletal Taking care of patients can be extremely challenging… Modesitt, Obstet Gyn Survey, 2005

  42. Opportunities • Prevention of weight gain during adolescence and early adulthood • Weight trajectory “mapping” • Monitor for central adiposity • Waist circumference • Monitor for risk of obesity-related disease • Metabolic syndrome • Intervene early if weight increases • Do not under-estimate the role of regular, moderate physical activity

  43. Therapy: Don’t wait, Don’t hesitate • Cancer diagnosis is an opportunity for behavior change • Support systems are active • Consequences (risk vs benefit) are high • Engage healthcare team • Small changes can translate to significant improvements in health indices and greater health and well-being

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