| Vitamin D Halves Pancreatic
Cancer Risk
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
People who take vitamin D tablets are half as
likely to get deadly pancreatic cancer as people
who do not, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.
Now they are checking to see if getting the vitamin
from food or sunlight also cuts the risk.
The study suggests one easy way to reduce the
risk of pancreatic cancer, the fourth-leading cause
of death from cancer in the United States. This
year, the American Cancer Society estimates that
32,000 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed, and
only 5 percent of patients will survive more than
five years.
"Because there is no effective screening for pancreatic
cancer, identifying controllable risk factors for
the disease is essential for developing strategies
that can prevent cancer," Halcyon Skinner of
Northwestern University in Chicago, who helped
lead the study, said in a statement.
"Vitamin D has shown strong potential for preventing
and treating prostate cancer, and areas with greater
sunlight exposure have lower incidence and mortality
for prostate, breast, and colon cancers, leading
us to investigate a role for Vitamin D in pancreatic
cancer risk."
Working with colleagues at Harvard University,
Skinner's team examined data from two large, long-term
health surveys involving 46,771 men aged 40 to
75 and 75,427 women aged 38 to 65.
They found that people who took the U.S. Recommended
Daily Allowance of Vitamin D, 400 IU a day, had
a 43 percent lower risk of pancreatic cancer.
Those who took doses of less than 150 IU per day
had a 22 percent reduced risk of cancer.
Writing in the journal Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention,
the researchers said taking more than 400 IU a
day did not reduce the risk further.
Vitamin D is produced by the body when sunlight
hits the skin, but most Americans do not get enough
sunlight to produce the needed amount. Milk, both
dairy and soy, is fortified with the vitamin. Some
foods such as fish, eggs and liver also contain
vitamin D.
"In concert with laboratory results suggesting
anti-tumor effects of Vitamin D, our results point
to a possible role for Vitamin D in the prevention
and possible reduction in mortality of pancreatic
cancer," Skinner said.
"Since no other environmental or dietary factor
showed this risk relationship, more study of Vitamin
D's role is warranted."
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