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The Association of Diabetes and Obesity With Prostate Cancer Progression: HCaP-NC

Authors :
Laura H. Hendrix
Melissa A. Troester
Matthew E. Nielsen
Laura Farnan
Jianwen Cai
Andrew F. Olshan
Elizabeth T. H. Fontham
Jeannette T. Bensen
Saira Khan
James L. Mohler
Source :
The Prostate. 77(8)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

BACKGROUND The role of race in modifying the association among diabetes, obesity, and prostate cancer (CaP) progression is not well studied. We evaluated diabetes and obesity in association with time to CaP progression in White Americans (Whites) and Black Americans (Blacks). METHODS Our study sample consisted of 363 White and 284 Black research participants from the Health Care Access and CaP Treatment in North Carolina (HCaP-NC) cohort. The association between self-reported diabetes or obesity and CaP progression (mean follow-up time approximately 5 years) was assessed using Cox proportional hazards modeling, with adjustment for potential confounders. Stratum-specific hazard ratio (HR) estimates for Whites and Blacks were evaluated. RESULTS Self-reported diabetes was not associated with CaP progression in the cohort as a whole (HR: 0.86, 95%CI: 0.54, 1.35), or among racially defined groups (Whites, HR: 1.03, 95%CI: 0.50, 2.13 or Blacks, HR: 0.77, 95%CI: 0.43, 1.39). Obesity was positively associated with CaP progression among Whites, in models including (HR: 1.79, 95%CI: 1.08, 2.97), and excluding (HR: 1.80, 95%CI: 1.09, 2.96) diabetes as a covariate. No association was observed between obesity and CaP progression in Blacks or the cohort as whole. CONCLUSIONS Self-reported diabetes was not associated with CaP progression In HCaP-NC. Obesity was associated with CaP progression only among White research participants. Prostate 77:878–887, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
10970045
Volume :
77
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Prostate
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba45735368e36b1e6f5e0703fa965242