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Adiposity and sex-specific cancer risk

Mathias Rask‐Andersen, Emma Ivansson, Julia Höglund, Weronica E. Ek, Torgny Karlsson, Åsa Johansson

2023Cancer Cell65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Obesity is associated with several types of cancer and fat distribution, which differs dramatically between sexes, has been suggested to be an independent risk factor. However, sex-specific effects on cancer risk have rarely been studied. Here we estimate the effects of fat accumulation and distribution on cancer risk in females and males. We performed a prospective study in 442,519 UK Biobank participants, for 19 cancer types and additional histological subtypes, with a mean follow-up time of 13.4 years. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the effect of 14 different adiposity phenotypes on cancer rates, and a 5% false discovery rate was considered statistically significant. Adiposity-related traits are associated with all but three cancer types, and fat accumulation is associated with a larger number of cancers compared to fat distribution. In addition, fat accumulation or distribution exhibit differential effects between sexes on colorectal, esophageal, and liver cancer.

Topics & Concepts

CancerColorectal cancerInternal medicineObesityMedicineOncologyProportional hazards modelHazard ratioRisk factorDistribution (mathematics)BiologyPhysiologyEndocrinologyConfidence intervalMathematical analysisMathematicsCancer Risks and FactorsCancer, Lipids, and MetabolismLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
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