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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a preliminary report on a small fraction of the projected subject population, some evidence in support of both sexual activity and venereal transmission hypotheses is accumulating. Prostatic cancer cases, in contrast to hospitalized and/or neighborhood controls, are beginning to show greater proportions of selected sexual activities compatible with venereal transmission of an infectious agent, such as number of sexual partners, use of prostitutes, prior venereal disease, and genital infections in the spouse. Patients with prostatic cancer also appear to have had higher fertility and more prostatic cancer in blood relatives than controls. Age at first intercourse and at first marriage are lower among the cancer patients than among the controls. Antibody titrations for herpesvirus and cytomegalic virus, although currently not revealing striking disparities in positivity, tend to show higher titers among the cancer cases.
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PMID:Epidemiologic study of prostatic cancer: preliminary report. 19 89

A case-control study on prostatic cancer was conducted in Kyoto, Japan, from 1981-1984, including 100 patients with prostatic cancer (PC) and age, hospital, and date-of-admission matched controls of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) patients and general hospital patients. Analysis of several sexual factors obtained through a self-administered questionnaire revealed the following observations: 1) cancer patients had fewer sex partners before marriage (relative risk, RR = 0.35; 95% confidence interval: 0.13-0.93) than the hospital controls; 2) they had more vigorous sexual activities in the third (RR = 2.89; 1.01-8.28) and fourth decades of life (RR = 2.26: 1.03-4.95) than hospital controls, but no significantly different sexual activities from controls in other decades; 3) they had less frequent orgasms (RR = 2.55; 1.11-5.83) than BPH controls or (RR = 4.96: 1.78-13.9) hospital controls, and sexual intercourse appeared to be less satisfactory (RR = 2.08: 1.05-4.13) than that of hospital controls; and 4) they had less frequent episodes of sexually transmitted diseases (RR = 0.36: 0.16-0.83) than BPH controls. Marital status, fertility, ejaculation, masturbation, nocturnal emission, contraceptive use, and wife's episodes of sexually transmitted disease were not linked to prostatic cancer risk.
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PMID:A case-control study of prostatic cancer in Kyoto, Japan: sexual risk factors. 225 Dec 22

Information on suspected risk factors for prostate cancer was obtained from in-person interviews as part of a case-control study of tissue sex hormone receptors and serum hormone levels. The risk factors examined were medical history (including venereal disease), sexual history, smoking, alcohol consumption, and occupational exposures. Study subjects were 40 prostate cancer patients and 64 benign prostatic hyperplasia controls who were newly diagnosed during 1984-1985 at North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. Subjects were white and black men aged 50 years and older. Comparisons of cases' and controls' past medical histories did not support a venereal disease hypothesis of prostate cancer etiology. The most prominent finding is an association with farming employment: 75% of cases compared to 38% of controls reported farmwork occupations. Exposures to pesticides and herbicides, while more common among the patients, did not account for the association detected for farming. No relationship was observed with cadmium exposure, the most frequently cited occupational risk factor for prostate cancer.
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PMID:Medical, life-style, and occupational risk factors for prostate cancer. 243 37

To identify risk factors for prostate cancer and to try to explain the high risk of blacks relative to whites, case-control interview studies of prostate cancer were conducted in both populations in southern California. Both studies included 142 pairs of cases and population controls matched on age. Cases in blacks were identified by the population-based tumor registry of Los Angeles County and cases in whites were identified by a population-based tumor registry of a southern California retirement community. A past history of venereal disease was associated with a high risk of prostate cancer in both populations [relative risk (RR) = 2.3 in whites; RR = 1.7 in blacks]. The result in blacks was statistically significant (P = .03). Black cases tended to have more frequent sexual intercourse than black controls at all ages; the difference became statistically significant for intercourse late in life. Data from controls suggested that, overall, blacks have earlier and more frequent sexual activity than whites, but the two populations were dissimilar in social class characteristics. Fat intake was a risk factor for prostate cancer in both populations, but vitamin A consumption and protein intake were inconsistently related or unrelated to prostate cancer risk. While beta-carotene was not consistently related to risk, there was some indication that in persons with low fat intake, low beta-carotene intake may be associated with high risk. Circumcision was negatively associated with risk in both populations (RR = 0.5 in whites; RR = 0.6 in blacks). These results are discussed in the context of major etiologic hypotheses for prostate cancer.
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PMID:Case-control studies of prostate cancer in blacks and whites in southern California. 347 95

A case-control study of a number of factors of possible etiologic significance for prostatic cancer was conducted in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. The focus was primarily on sexual factors. Two hundred and fifty incident cases of prostatic cancer, 238 hospital controls, and 240 neighborhood controls were included. Controls were matched to cases on age, sex, and race. Cases were somewhat more educated than controls. An association was found between prostatic cancer and a history of venereal disease in their sexual partners: odds ratio (OR) = 2.71, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.14 to 6.46 and OR = 2.09, 95% CI = 1.02 to 4.29 for hospital and neighborhood controls, respectively. Cases had more sexual experiences with prostitutes, although their overall lifetime frequency of sexual intercourse with all partners was somewhat lower. Cases also reported more homosexual partners than controls. The results from the study lend some support to an infectious hypothesis for prostatic cancer. The lower frequency of sexual intercourse (OR = .54, 95% CI = .34 to .83 and OR = .68, 95% CI = .47 to 1.01 for hospital and neighborhood controls, respectively) is also noteworthy and may be indicative of a hormonal difference related to sexual interest or drive.
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PMID:Sexual factors and prostatic cancer: results from a case-control study. 355 1

The age adjusted death rate from prostate cancer in Japan is one of the lowest in the world but is rising steadily. The vast majority of cases of prostate cancer remain undetected during life, the prevalence of prostate cancer detected at autopsy being 2800 times that of lethal cancer in Japanese in Japan, 570 times in whites in the USA and 470 times in blacks in the USA. A case-control study of prostate cancer carried out in Japan and the Netherlands revealed a number of statistically significant risk factors, including rural residence, more brothers, colon neoplasms in relatives, no morning erections, frequent sexual intercourse in 30s, episodes of sexually transmitted disease, lower plasma testosterone and dihydrotestosterone concentrations and lower beta-carotene intake.
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PMID:The geography of prostate cancer and its treatment in Japan. 762 63

The risk for prostate cancer increases with age, with a family history of the disease and with living in a Westernized society, especially for blacks. Although there is no doubt that genetic factors are important, and might explain some of the geographical variation in rates, the differences between populations are so large that environmental factors must also be important. The evidence suggesting that dietary fat and/or meat may increase risk is quite consistent. The observed relative risks are small (about a 30% increase for high v. low consumption) but may have been underestimated because of inaccurate measurement of diet and further study of this topic is needed. The evidence does not support the hypothesis that carotene intake is associated with risk. There is reasonably consistent evidence suggesting that an increased risk for prostate cancer is associated with a high level of sexual activity and/or a history of sexually transmitted disease, and with vasectomy. These observations need further investigation to eliminate the possibility that they are due to biases. Much more information is needed. Prospective studies, with dietary and lifestyle questionnaires and stored blood samples, are needed to answer the outstanding questions.
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PMID:Risk factors for prostate cancer. 762 74

A case-control study in Somerset and east Devon was undertaken to investigate possible risk factors for prostatic cancer. A total of 159 cases, diagnosed at Taunton. Yeovil and Exeter hospitals between May 1989 and May 1991, were identified prospectively and interviewed with a structured questionnaire. A total of 161 men diagnosed with benign prostatic hypertrophy and 164 non-urological hospital controls were given identical questionnaires. The questionnaire covered a wide range of factors identified from previous studies, but the central hypotheses for this study related to diet (fat and green vegetables), sexual activity and farming as an occupation. This study found no association between farming and risk of prostatic cancer (odds ratio = 0.74, 95% confidence interval 0.46-1.18), nor with sexual activity as measured by number of sexual partners (chi-squared test for trend P = 0.52). A history of sexually transmitted disease was not significantly associated with prostatic cancer, but the numbers involved were very small and the odds ratio of 2.06 (0.38-11.2) is consistent with the hypothesis. A range of questions aimed at eliciting dietary fat intake produced no significant associations, although meat consumption showed increasing risk with increasing consumption (test for trend P = 0.005). Increased consumption of leafy green vegetables was associated with lower risk, but not significantly so (test for trend P = 0.16). As expected with so many factors investigated, some statistically significant associations were found, although these can only be viewed as hypothesis generating in this context. These included apparent protective effects of circumcision and high fish consumption.
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PMID:A case-control study of cancer of the prostate in Somerset and east Devon. 876 87

In patients with malignant diseases, characteristic alterations in the expression of CD44 protein and their variants were found. For the present study, the serum concentrations of the standard isoform CD44 std and the two variant isoforms CD44 v5 amd CD44 v6 were measured by ELISA in patients with prostate cancer (n = 49), benign prostatic hyperplasia (n = 30), renal cell carcinoma (n = 31) and bladder cancer (n = 29). The data were compared with the results of 30 healthy men and 30 healthy women. The sCD44 v5 concentrations in patients with prostate cancer (p < 0.01), benign prostatic hyperplasia (p < 0.01) and men with renal cell cancer (p < 0.01) were significantly lower than those measured in the male control group. The sCD44 v5 concentrations observed in male patients with bladder cancer were lower than in the male control group (p < 0.05). Only in one group the concentration of sCD44 std differed significantly from the others. The sCD44 std concentration in male patients with renal cell cancer was significantly lower than in the male control group (p < 0.01). Other significant differences were not found. In contrast to results observed in other carcinomas, the determination of soluble CD44 proteins in serum cannot be recommended as a marker for urological malignancies.
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PMID:Soluble CD44 variants in the serum of patients with urological malignancies. 914 4

PURPOSE: Various medical conditions, infectious agents, sexual, and hormonal factors have been investigated in relation to prostate cancer risk. Given inconsistent results these factors were examined in this study.METHODS: This population-based case-control study was conducted in northeastern Ontario from 1995 to 1999. Cases (n = 760), aged 45 to 84 at the time of diagnosis, were identified through the Ontario Cancer Registry and diagnosed between January 1995 and December 1998. Controls (n = 1,634) were age-frequency matched and were selected from the northeastern Ontario population using published telephone listings. Mail and telephone questionnaires were used for data collection. Logistic regression was used to investigate risk associated with: 1) particular medical conditions and 2) hormonal and sexual factors. Cases were subdivided into those with symptoms of prostate disease and those with few or no such symptoms.RESULTS: Symptomatic cases who reported a history of venereal disease (age-adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 2.11, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.18-3.80) and vasectomy (age-adjusted OR = 1.49, 95% CI 1.14-1.95) were at significantly increased risk of prostate cancer. Asymptomatic cases who reported a check-up at least once a year were at increased risk (age-adjusted OR = 1.46, 95% CI 1.08-1.98). Asymptomatic and symptomatic cases who reported a history of prostate cancer in a first degree relative were at increased risk (age-adjusted OR = 2.41, 95% CI 1.64-3.54; age-adjusted OR = 3.18, 95% CI 2.28-4.45, respectively). Symptomatic cases with a history of urinary tract infection were at non-significantly increased risk (age-adjusted OR = 1.31, 95% CI 0.98-1.76). Heart disease, mumps, allergies, and height were generally not associated with prostate cancer.CONCLUSIONS: A history of venereal disease, family history of prostate cancer, and vasectomy were positively associated with prostate cancer. Further investigation of selected medical conditions, sexual, and hormonal factors in prostate cancer development is warranted.
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PMID:Prostate cancer risk. Medical history, sexual, and hormonal factors. 1101 99


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