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Heavy drinking-prostate cancer link confirmed
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Monday Mar. 16, 2009 9:44 AM ET
Men who drink 14 or more drinks a week are 20 per cent more likely to develop prostate cancer, according to an international review co-authored by a University of Victoria researcher.
The results, published in Molecular Nutrition and Food Research, provides more concrete evidence of the link between alcohol and prostate cancer - a link that has remained controversial.
Tim Stockwell, director of the University of Victoria's Centre for Addictions Research of B.C., along with research teams from the U.S. and Australia reviewed 35 previously published studies that linked drinking and the risk of developing prostate cancer.
The studies that Stockwell and his colleagues examined included "cohort studies", which measure people at one point in time and then re-measure them later to see if their drinking, smoking or exercise is associated with the incidence of disease.
The other type included were "case-control studies," in which researchers compared patients who already had the disease to people who didn't in order to compare differences.
Since the current literature on the link between prostate cancer and alcohol was mixed and inconclusive, the researchers hoped that combining the results of the 35 studies would offer the larger numbers that would lead to clearer results.
They found that case control studies were more likely to find the relationship, while cohort studies were less likely, which explains why different conclusions were reached by other researchers, the authors of this review say.
When all types of studies were combined, however, the authors concluded: "Men who drink two or more standard drinks a day (or 14 drinks a week) or more have about a 20 per cent greater chance of developing prostate cancer."
The prevalence of prostate cancer is higher in Canada than the U.S., and higher in both countries than in Australia, the researchers said; but the reasons are not entirely clear.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among Canadian men and one in seven Canadian men will develop the disease during his lifetime. In Australia, one in nine men will develop it and in the U.S., it is the second leading cause of cancer death among men.
Stockwell said it may be that since prostate cancer typically kills men who are middle-aged and older, there are higher incidences of the disease in countries with longer life expectancies.
The authors point out that prostate cancer risk increases at the same ages that alcohol is thought to have a "protective effect" for heart disease. Men who drink two or more drinks a day might take this into account if they are consuming alcohol to prevent heart attacks.
"Further research is needed to examine more carefully the balance of health risks and benefits for different types of disease from drinking alcohol at different levels," the authors said.
In previous papers, the authors have also questioned the evidence supporting the view that moderate drinking protects against heart disease.
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I applaud the budget, even though Health Care and education may stay unscathed. Sadly this cannot last and I worry to later this year where cuts will become enviable. If anything, this provides the Wildrose Alliance plenty of ammo when an election is called.




Comments are now closed for this story
Happy Hour Harry.
said
JR
said
Fatman
said
Is anyone aware if links between cancer and the way, or frequency, people have sex been found yet? If so don't tell me as I might be, or perhaps already have all but scr**** myself to death! However, on the bright side, I can't think of a better way to go and you can safely bet your last drink that I'll pass from this earth complete with a smile on my face!
Dana
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Sammy Loves the Sauce
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jz
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nc
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When alcohol is thought to help your heart, this is the same time that alcohol can cause prostate cancer.
I am not a drinker of any alcohol. In my life time all I have seen is the destructiveness of alcohol. The only thing alcohol is good for as an antiseptic.
Many people love their alcohol. Many suffer for it.
James
said
Guys that drink also like eating fried foods and other unhealthy bar foods. I think there are grouping unrelated things with this study
Michael (Ottawa)
said
REALLY? Then I am way below average. Three (3) beer is my max at any time but usually one 1 beer at a time suffices which I throughly enjoy (Amber/red/stout)and same with wine at those times when I do decide to enjoy.
Mario Novati
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George W.Wexler M.D. F.R.C.(Can.)
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david sawkiw [saskatchewan farmer]
said
I'm thinking,, if I got a government grant I could prove it to be harmful to stand while peeing..........
Brian, from Brantford, ON
said
Personally, I am a heavy drinker, drinking more than four litres of consumable liquids every day, but none of these are alcoholic, by design (even if there are trace amounts of alcohol in such "beverages").
The meaning for the term "to drink", as I and many others see it, is to "consume liquids" for various reasons, including the one "to satisfy one's thirst". To others, it might mean "to consume alcoholic beverages" in a limited sense (applying to adults), but when the term is used in the introduction of an article, it is more than a little confusing, especially with today's professional journalism standards...
Bob Lewis
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nc
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Alex Kokonat
said