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      Applying what we know to accelerate cancer prevention.

      Science translational medicine
      Biomedical Research, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Interdisciplinary Studies, Neoplasms, prevention & control, therapy, Socioeconomic Factors, Treatment Outcome

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          Abstract

          More than half of the cancer occurring today is preventable by applying knowledge that we already have. Tobacco, obesity, and physical inactivity are the modifiable causes of cancer that generate the most disease. Cancer burden can be reduced by alterations in individual and population behaviors and by public health efforts as long as these changes are driven by sound scientific knowledge and social commitment to change. The obstacles to these efforts are societal and arise from the organization of institutions, including academia, and in the habits of daily life. To achieve maximal possible cancer prevention, we will need better ways to implement what we know and improved infrastructure that will better incentivize and support transdisciplinary, multilevel research and successful intervention.

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          Most cited references42

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          Tamoxifen for Prevention of Breast Cancer: Report of the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project P-1 Study

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            Obesity and Cancer

            Introduction Because weight, weight gain, and strategies to manage weight are important both for the risk for developing cancer and for survival among cancer patients, we divided this review into two sections relating to the patient population. We then present a set of strategies that can be useful to guide clinical advice to patients for whom weight control is an important adjunct to risk management or to improve quality of life and disease-free survival after diagnosis. Weight, Weight Gain, and Risk for Cancer Although evidence shows that adult overweight and obesity are related to risk for many cancers, the growing epidemic of obesity provides a challenge to clinical practice and the implementation of guidelines for the management of weight. Historical data from the past 25 years point to obesity as a cause of approximately 14% of cancer deaths in men and up to 20% of cancer deaths in women [1]. These may be conservative estimates because the population has gained substantial weight over this time period and the prevalence of overweight and obesity has increased from 15% in 1980 to 35% in 2005 [2] (Fig. 1). Some now estimate that the total health burden of overweight and obesity may exceed that for cigarette smoking [3]. Figure 1. Trends in obesity, U.S. Abbreviation: BMI, body mass index. Source: NCHS 2008. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/overweight/overweight_adult.htm. A major review of weight, physical activity, and cancer incidence by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) used obesity prevalence data from Europe and relative risks from a meta-analysis of published studies and concluded, in 2002, that obesity was a cause of 11% of colon cancer cases, 9% of postmenopausal breast cancer cases, 39% of endometrial cancer cases, 25% of kidney cancer cases, and 37% of esophageal cancer cases [4]. In addition, data from the American Cancer Society suggested that overweight and obesity were related to mortality from liver cancer, pancreatic cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and myeloma [1]. This effect on mortality reflects both the excess incidence and excess mortality among those with cancer. Since the 2002 IARC report, substantial new evidence has supported a cause-and-effect relation between overweight and obesity and the onset of these cancers, further increasing the burden of cancer resulting from obesity [5]. The American Institute for Cancer Research and World Cancer Research Fund reported that there is convincing evidence for a relation between obesity and esophageal, pancreatic, colorectal, postmenopausal breast, endometrial, and kidney cancers, with probable evidence for gallbladder cancer. In addition, they found probable evidence that abdominal fatness, in particular, increases the risk for pancreatic, endometrial, and postmenopausal breast cancer. Finally, emerging evidence suggests that obesity increases risk for aggressive prostate cancer [6]. Overall, we estimate that overweight and obesity cause approximately 20% of all cancer cases. Previously Doll and Peto [7] included overnutrition (overweight) with diet causing a combined 35% of all cancer cases. In Figure 2, we break out overweight and obesity from diet and provide updated estimates for the causes of cancer. Figure 2. Estimated proportion of cancer in the U.S. that could have been avoided by changes in each category of nongenetic cancer causes. To conclude that a cause-and-effect relation exists between obesity and cancer at each site, one often pursues studies of mechanisms that confirm the underlying biology of this relation and provide insights into prevention strategies. Take, for example, postmenopausal breast cancer. Among postmenopausal women, obesity is directly related to circulating estradiol levels [8], which themselves are directly related to breast cancer risk [9, 10]. When the action of estrogens is interrupted by estrogen receptor modulators in randomized controlled trials, breast cancer incidence is approximately 50% lower [11, 12]. Just as smoking cessation leads to a reduction in the risk for lung cancer, adding to the evidence of a cause-and-effect relation, a documented 50% reduction in the risk for breast cancer among women who lost ≥10 kg after menopause and kept it off [13] adds to our understanding of this causal relation. In addition, focusing on weight loss after menopause, a time in life when obesity clearly increases the risk for breast cancer, provides important evidence on the time frame for change in cause (weight) and subsequent change in cancer incidence. This lower incidence of postmenopausal breast cancer follows the decline in circulating estrogen after weight loss. For colon cancer, growing evidence points to insulin pathways mediating the effect of body mass index BMI and risk [14]. Studies of blood glucose levels and colon cancer show a direct relation between higher glucose and subsequent risk [14]. Providing further biologic rationale, c-peptide [15], a marker of insulin production, also shows this positive relation, and animal models using insulin injection versus saline show a significantly higher incidence of colon cancer among those injected with insulin [16]. Finally, preclinical data provide additional support for the insulin–insulin-like growth factor (IGF) hypothesis of cancer risk, as outlined in several excellently detailed recent reviews [17, 18]. The phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway likely compromises the downstream target of insulin, and is one of the pathways most commonly altered in epithelial tumors [18, 19]. In sum, strong evidence points to hyperinsulinemia as the direct pathway from adiposity to colon cancer. For each cancer site, we present summary estimates of relative risk from the rigorous meta-analysis by Renehan et al. [5] and the likely pathway or mechanism for a causal relation between obesity and cancer (Tables 1 and 2). Table 1. RR for cancer per 5 kg/m2 higher BMI and most likely causal mechanism: Males Shown is the RR for a five-point greater BMI—for example, the RR linked to a BMI of 28 compared with a BMI of 23, or a BMI of 32 compared with a BMI of 27. a p 2 kg/m2 after a breast cancer diagnosis had a relative risk for death during 9 years of follow-up that was 1.64 (95% CI, 1.07–2.51), compared with stable weight women (Fig. 4). Insulin pathways have been suggested as one mechanism for this effect [35]. Weight gain following diagnosis may be particularly problematic because research suggests that it is largely an increase in fat mass and not muscle mass [36]. Furthermore, evidence that physical activity after diagnosis reduces the risk for breast cancer recurrence [37] and intervention trials of diet and physical activity that showed longer disease-free survival times among the intervention group, the members of which lost substantially more weight than the control group [38], all point to the importance of energy balance after breast cancer. Figure 4. Sustained weight loss and breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women who never used postmenopausal hormones. Based on Table 3 of Eliassen AH, Colditz G, Rosner B et al. Adult weight change and risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. JAMA 2006;296:193–201. Although obesity is not associated with prostate cancer incidence overall, it is associated with fatal and aggressive disease [6]. There is also emerging evidence that prostate cancer is more difficult to detect in obese men [6]. Obese men have a higher risk for recurrence following prostatectomy [6, 39, 40], but there is no evidence for higher rates of recurrence among obese men undergoing brachytherapy [6, 39, 41]. Obese men also have higher rates of death from prostate cancer [6]. However, some reports suggest that obese patients with metastatic prostate cancer may have better postdiagnosis outcomes, perhaps because obesity acts as a cachexia preventive [42]. Evidence for an effect of obesity on colon cancer survival is mixed. Meyerhardt et al. [43] found no association with disease-free survival time or overall mortality (patients all received weight-based treatment, so this could not be attributed to chemotherapy underdosing). Subsequent reports have indicated that those who are very obese (class 2 obesity) have greater overall mortality and shorter disease-free survival intervals [44–46]. However, the one study to look at the effects of weight change found no association with survival outcomes [44]. In addition, in one study [45], chemotherapy dose was capped for the very obese, which may confound the findings. The implications of worse outcomes for the morbidly obese are particularly worrisome because this is a rapidly increasing segment of the population. In addition to the impact of obesity on disease incidence and progression, concern has been raised regarding the potential for dosing of therapy to be poorly matched to weight in heavier cancer patients. The narrow therapeutic index associated with many chemotherapeutic drugs prompts a rational concern on the part of the medical oncologist that the high doses of chemotherapy required by the very obese will result in excess toxicity. Research in this area has suggested that obese patients are frequently treated at lower chemotherapy dose intensities than the nonobese. Paradoxically, studies have not demonstrated greater chemotherapy-related toxicity in obese patients treated at full dose intensities [47]. This refutes the notion that obese patients should uniformly receive dose-reduced therapy. For obese patients being treated with curative intent, dose reductions should be approached with particular caution. A similar problem with regard to chemotherapy in obese patients surrounds the common use of body surface area (BSA) for dose calculation. Historically, cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents have been dosed this way based on the assumption that metabolism is proportional to BSA, a theory first described by Rubner in 1883. One of the more commonly used formulae is based on measurements performed on a small number of individuals, reported nearly 100 years ago [48]. Although the BSA approach may be helpful when extrapolating doses between mice and humans during the translational period from preclinical to early-phase clinical studies, some have questioned whether this approach is appropriate in clinical practice [49]. For example, a man who is 180-cm tall with an ideal body weight of 71 kg has a BSA of 1.9, according to the Dubois formula, whereas another man who is 180-cm tall and who weighs twice as much (142 kg) has a BSA of 2.55. The BSA in the latter man is 34% greater than the BSA in the man with ideal body weight, whereas the weight of the latter man is 100% greater. Particularly for drugs with any degree of fat solubility (higher volume of distribution), BSA dosing is likely to result in systematic underdosing, compared with weight-based dosing. With increasing attention being paid to chemotherapy dose intensity as a predictor of treatment response in numerous tumor types, careful reconsideration of the optimal dosing in obese patients may be appropriate for some drugs [47, 50]. Obesity may also interfere with the ability to deliver other forms of treatment. Wong et al. [51] found that there was a shift in the delivery of external-beam radiation in obese patients, resulting in the target location not receiving the full dose. In addition, research has suggested that, among men undergoing prostatectomy, surgical margins may not be as clean in obese men and they may have fewer nerve bundles preserved [52]. Quality of life among cancer patients and those free from cancer is reduced by higher BMI. Limited data suggest that weight loss is associated with improved quality of life. More substantial data point to an increase in physical activity among cancer survivors leading to significant increases in quality of life [53]. Mechanisms Among cancer survivors, the likely pathways from obesity leading to recurrence and death again may vary by tumor site. Insulin receptors are increasingly being studied as a mechanism for obesity to have adverse effects among breast cancer survivors. The insulin receptor is overexpressed and may bind both insulin and IGF-II [54]. Among colon cancer patients, the insulin pathway has again been identified as potentially mediating adverse outcomes, and recent research addressing obesity and STMN1 (stathmin or oncoprotein-18), which destabilizes microtubules and reorganizes cytoskeleton and functions in cell progression and cell migration, indicates that the adverse effect of BMI among colon cancer patients may be limited to those who are STMN1+ [55]. Metformin is associated with a lower cancer incidence among diabetics [56] and with lower cancer mortality among patients with type 2 diabetes [57]. Among mechanisms for such a benefit are the inhibition of cancer cell growth, suppression of ErbB-2 oncoprotein overexpression, and inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin [58–60]. This rapidly expanding area of laboratory and human evidence points to a role for metformin among diabetic patients, with clinical trials now proposed [61]. Inflammation is also a source of great interest. Adipocytes release inflammatory markers, which are increasingly being found to be associated with a worse postdiagnosis prognosis. In the Healthy Eating, Activity, and Living (HEAL) study, serum amyloid a and c-reactive protein levels were associated with shorter overall survival in breast cancer patients [62]. As with the hypothesized mechanisms linking obesity to cancer risk, ample preclinical data detail the linkages in these pathways [17, 18]. Weight Loss and Intermediate Endpoints Many randomized controlled trials of weight loss and measures of insulin, glucose, and blood pressure show a strong response to an increase in activity and a reduction in adiposity [63]. Lack of energy expenditure in the form of physical activity is a leading determinant of higher body mass. For those who are already overweight, physical activity, in combination with dietary changes, is important for achieving, and particularly for maintaining, weight loss [63]. There is increasing evidence [64] that attaining >9,000 daily steps as an indicator of physical activity is associated with a lower likelihood of being obese, including among lower income and racial/ethnic minority populations. TV viewing is a highly prevalent sedentary activity; Americans watch at least 4 hours of TV each day and TV viewing is the most prevalent activity after work and sleep. TV viewing is positively associated with excess body weight among children and adults [65, 66]. TV viewing may also promote obesity through the promotion of consumption of calorically dense foods through advertising and other media content [67]. The strong and consistent association between TV viewing and obesity suggests the importance of including reduction in TV hours as a target in behavioral weight reduction efforts. Benefits of Weight Loss and Increased Physical Activity Among Cancer Survivors Strong evidence supports the idea that an increase in physical activity leads to improved quality of life among cancer survivors [53]. Among men after prostate surgery, being lean and physically active is associated with superior symptoms of incontinence, compared with obese and inactive men, suggesting a role for weight loss after prostate resection to improve quality of life [68]. The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute evidence review on weight loss [63] evaluated 86 randomized, controlled trials and concluded that “low calorie diets are recommended for weight loss in overweight and obese persons” (evidence category A) and that “Physical activity is recommended as part of a comprehensive weight loss therapy and weight control program because it modestly contributes to weight loss” (evidence category A) [63]. Specific recommended intake levels vary based on a number of factors, including current weight, activity levels, and weight loss goals. There are many other behavioral factors that influence weight loss and may be more effectively intervened upon over an extended intervention period to achieve sustained weight loss. We outline several of these in Figure 5. Rather than focus on specific calorie calculations, we recommend behavioral targets that should lead to an energy deficit as well as increase and maintain patient motivation. Figure 5. Physical activity, diet, and behavioral goals for sustained weight loss. Counseling for Weight Loss Providers play a central role in guiding their patients to follow strategies to reduce or maintain their weight and thus improve their quality of life and reduce their risk for developing a primary malignancy, or improve survival among those diagnosed with cancer. Given the prevalence of overweight and obesity, weight loss is a sound strategy for reducing the risk for cancer. Here, we briefly outline strategies that a provider can use to counsel patients to maintain weight and achieve a sustained weight loss. For effective weight change interventions, one would like to have on hand strategies to address individual behaviors, social factors that might reinforce individual behavior change, and environmental strategies (such as safe sidewalks and effective transportation systems, etc.) [69] that promote or discourage a given behavior. The Diabetes Prevention Trial demonstrated the efficacy of an intensive health care provider–based intervention to reduce weight and increase physical activity over a 24-month period and thereby prevent diabetes [70]. Translating this efficacy study into effective approaches that work in the broader clinical setting remains to be demonstrated. One approach, derived from the methodology originally developed by the National Cancer Institute to guide physicians in counseling their patients to quit smoking, the “Five As” model guides clinicians through a counseling session, with each “A” corresponding to a brief behavioral intervention—assess, advise, agree, assist, arrange — which together have been shown to be effective. Clinicians may use the Five As approach to deliver behavior change strategy messages (such as those in Fig. 5). Interactive technologies can also address a wide variety of health behavior domains simultaneously. Thus, interactive technology can provide a streamlined, consistent method for conducting many aspects of evidence-based behavior change counseling, including assessing current health behaviors, identifying barriers to change, allowing the patient to set goals and select relevant activities, and arranging follow-up support. Evidence from randomized trials demonstrates that the use of interactive technologies supports lifestyle behavior change [71], although most of this research was conducted using a single-disease and/or single behavior change focus. Practice-based research indicates that clinicians who have limited financial, space, and personnel resources favor tools that address comorbid conditions and health behaviors simultaneously. In addition, tools that can be accessed via patients' homes or from community settings are useful and effective and appeal to clinicians who face barriers to providing self-management care tools [71]. Thus, there is great interest in the ability of interactive and Web-based tools to deliver and reinforce behavior change strategies in a cost-effective manner. Increasingly, Web-based tools for supporting positive lifestyle changes are making their way into the clinical setting. However, it is unclear whether such interventions are effective. An increasing number of studies are beginning to assess their potential to reduce weight, both in the health care setting and beyond. Summary of Provider Role Because the factors that influence energy balance range from the individual to the environment, efforts to shift the population distribution of physical activity upward and diet toward healthier choices will require emphasis on all the intervention points: health care settings, communities, and environment. The challenge for providers is to engage the patient in understanding the importance of weight control and increased physical activity to begin on the path to behavior change. Safety Issues Although the benefits of weight maintenance and greater physical activity are well established for many chronic diseases, the risks must also be considered. These include injuries, alteration in glucose control for diabetics, and sustained increases in joint pain. In general, these risks are outweighed by the vast benefits of weight loss and increased physical activity and can generally be reduced with simple steps. To date, drug-based strategies to aid with weight loss have had side effects that reduce adherence. Conclusion Obesity causes a substantial proportion of all cancers, and emerging evidence suggests that adult weight loss reduces cancer risk. Increasing physical activity and avoiding weight gain after cancer, as in adult life, have substantial benefits.
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              Delivering affordable cancer care in high-income countries.

              The burden of cancer is growing, and the disease is becoming a major economic expenditure for all developed countries. In 2008, the worldwide cost of cancer due to premature death and disability (not including direct medical costs) was estimated to be US$895 billion. This is not simply due to an increase in absolute numbers, but also the rate of increase of expenditure on cancer. What are the drivers and solutions to the so-called cancer-cost curve in developed countries? How are we going to afford to deliver high quality and equitable care? Here, expert opinion from health-care professionals, policy makers, and cancer survivors has been gathered to address the barriers and solutions to delivering affordable cancer care. Although many of the drivers and themes are specific to a particular field-eg, the huge development costs for cancer medicines-there is strong concordance running through each contribution. Several drivers of cost, such as over-use, rapid expansion, and shortening life cycles of cancer technologies (such as medicines and imaging modalities), and the lack of suitable clinical research and integrated health economic studies, have converged with more defensive medical practice, a less informed regulatory system, a lack of evidence-based sociopolitical debate, and a declining degree of fairness for all patients with cancer. Urgent solutions range from re-engineering of the macroeconomic basis of cancer costs (eg, value-based approaches to bend the cost curve and allow cost-saving technologies), greater education of policy makers, and an informed and transparent regulatory system. A radical shift in cancer policy is also required. Political toleration of unfairness in access to affordable cancer treatment is unacceptable. The cancer profession and industry should take responsibility and not accept a substandard evidence base and an ethos of very small benefit at whatever cost; rather, we need delivery of fair prices and real value from new technologies. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                22461645
                3343638
                10.1126/scitranslmed.3003218

                Chemistry
                Biomedical Research,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice,Humans,Interdisciplinary Studies,Neoplasms,prevention & control,therapy,Socioeconomic Factors,Treatment Outcome

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