PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study suggests that unintentional weight loss is a signal to see a doctor

2024-01-23
(Press-News.org) Boston – Unintentional weight loss is associated with an increase in the risk of a cancer diagnosis within the coming year, according to a study from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

“If you are losing weight and you aren’t trying to lose weight by making changes in your exercise routine or diet, people should see their doctor to consider possible causes,” says lead investigator Brian Wolpin, MD, MPH, Director of the Gastrointestinal Cancer Center at Dana-Farber and Director of the Hale Family Center for Pancreatic Cancer Research. “There are many conditions that can result in unexpected weight loss. Your doctor can determine if there is something that needs evaluation.”

The findings were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association on January 23, 2024.

Compared with participants who did not lose weight, recent weight loss was associated with significantly increased risk for several types of cancer, including upper gastrointestinal tract (including esophageal, stomach, liver, biliary tract, and pancreatic cancer), hematological (including non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and leukemia), colorectal, and lung cancers. However, recent weight loss wasn’t found to be associated with increased risk for other cancer types, such as breast cancer, genitourinary cancer, brain cancer, or melanoma.

“Unexpected weight loss can come from cancer or many other conditions,” says Wolpin. “Sometimes weight loss is due to more exercise or a healthier diet, and this can be beneficial to people’s health. However, when a patient experiences unintentional weight loss not due to healthier behaviors, seeing your primary care doctor is appropriate, so they can determine whether additional evaluation is necessary for other causes of weight loss, including cancer.”

The study assessed 157,474 participants in two large longitudinal studies: the Nurses’ Health Study, which enrolled nurses aged 30 to 55 starting in 1976, and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, which enrolled male health professionals aged 40 to 75 years starting in 1986. Participants were followed until 2016.

Weight was reported by participants every other year in a biennial questionnaire that also included questions about physical activity. The questionnaire requested responses about dietary changes every four years. This information enabled Wolpin and colleagues to assess each participant’s level of weight loss promoting behaviors. Weight loss promoting behaviors were classified into “high” for those making both dietary improvements and increases to physical activity, “medium” if they made only one change, and “low” if they made no changes to diet and exercise.

“We wanted to differentiate healthy weight loss from unhealthy weight loss,” says Qiaoli Wang, MD, PhD, a research fellow at Dana-Farber and the manuscript’s first author. “Healthy weight loss can come from dietary changes or increased exercise. But unhealthy weight loss that occurs unexpectedly can be due to an underlying cancer.”

Patients with advanced cancer often lose weight, but weight loss is often not thought to occur with early-stage disease. This study found that similar levels of weight loss occurred before diagnosis of both early and late-stage disease. This is important because unintentional weight loss could be a sign of a developing cancer that could help diagnose the cancer earlier when there’s a chance for more effective treatment.

The mechanisms by which cancer results in weight loss varies depending on the type of cancer. This study strengthens findings from past research that connected unexpected weight loss with an increased cancer risk. In previous research, weight data was collected by doctors from patients potentially seeking out care for an illness. In this study, weight data was collected prospectively and regularly for decades and was not dependent on doctor visits to identify weight changes. This study also considered all types of cancers. However, the two studies analyzed were focused on health professionals, which is not a group that is fully representative of the U.S. population.

Funding: The National Institutes of Health, the Swedish Research Council, the Project P Fund, the Broman Family Fund for Pancreatic Cancer, the Hale Family Center for Pancreatic Cancer Research, the Lustgarten Foundation Dedicated Laboratory Program, Stand Up To Cancer, the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, the Noble Effort Fund, the Wexler Family Fund, the Promises for Purple, and the Bob Parsons Fund.

About Dana-Farber Cancer Institute 

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute is one of the world’s leading centers of cancer research and treatment. Dana-Farber’s mission is to reduce the burden of cancer through scientific inquiry, clinical care, education, community engagement, and advocacy. Dana-Farber is a federally designated Comprehensive Cancer Center and a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School.

We provide the latest treatments in cancer for adults through Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center and for children through Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. Dana-Farber is the only hospital nationwide with a top 5 U.S. News & World Report Best Cancer Hospital ranking in both adult and pediatric care.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research guides mathematical model-building for gene regulatory networks

New research guides mathematical model-building for gene regulatory networks
2024-01-23
AMES, Iowa — Over the last 20 years, researchers in biology and medicine have created Boolean network models to simulate complex systems and find solutions, including new treatments for colorectal cancer. “Boolean network models operate under the assumption that each gene in a regulatory network can have one of two states: on or off,” says Claus Kadelka, a systems biologist and associate professor of mathematics at Iowa State University. Kadelka and undergraduate student researchers recently published a study that ...

Reflecting on your legacy could make you more philanthropic, new research finds

2024-01-23
People have a tendency to leave their wealth to family members and other loved ones. However, Andrew Carnegie, a famously wealthy industrialist, once said “I would as soon leave to my son a curse as the almighty dollar.” Indeed, Carnegie donated over 90% of his fortune to charity. New research in Social Psychological and Personality Science shows that people can be spurred to look beyond close relationships in favor of philanthropy by having them reflect on their legacy. The researchers called this phenomenon the “Andrew Carnegie ...

Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation awarded NIH grant to develop allograft-rejection-on-a-chip model

Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation awarded NIH grant to develop allograft-rejection-on-a-chip model
2024-01-23
(LOS ANGELES) – January 23, 2024 - Vadim Jucaud, Ph.D., Assistant Professor at the Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation, has been awarded a grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop a functional organ-on-a-chip to model allogeneic transplant rejection. Such a model would allow the study of allograft tolerance and may ultimately lead to reducing organ transplant rejections without needing immunosuppressive drugs. Organ transplantation is a lifesaving procedure for patients with end-stage organ disease. Over 145,000 organs per year are transplanted worldwide from organ donors to recipients. For these so-called allografts, ...

A neurological disease paradigm shift

2024-01-23
One of the things that makes developing effective treatments for Parkinson’s disease so challenging is its complexity. While some forms are caused by genetics, others have environmental factors, and patients can show a wide range of symptoms of varying severity.  Diagnosis of Parkinson’s is also currently made very late, after the disease may have been in the brain for a decade or more.  In a paper published in The Lancet Neurology, a group of scientists  argue that this complexity demands a new way of classifying the disease for research purposes, one based not on clinical diagnosis but biology. The authors have called their biological model ...

No sex difference in concussion recovery among college athletes

2024-01-23
A new large, national study of collegiate student-athletes in the United States dispels a long-held belief about concussions, finding that women and men recover from sport-related head injuries within the same time frame.                                              Women and men’s recovery patterns ...

New study published in Nature Scientific Reports shows industry-leading performance for Waymark Signal in predicting avoidable ER and hospital utilization

2024-01-23
Waymark, the Medicaid provider enablement company, today published a peer-reviewed study in Nature’s Scientific Reports comparing the performance of Waymark SignalTM, the company’s proprietary machine learning technology, to conventional Medicaid risk models. The study found that Waymark Signal was 90 percent accurate in predicting avoidable emergency room (ER) and hospital utilization for patients receiving Medicaid — stronger performance than leading Medicaid risk models in the field.   Waymark ...

Uncovering the secrets behind the silent flight of owls

Uncovering the secrets behind the silent flight of owls
2024-01-23
Owls are fascinating creatures that can fly silently through some of the quietest places. Their wings make no noise while flying, enabling them to accurately locate their prey using their exceptional hearing ability while remaining undetected. This unique ability depends on many factors and has long been a hot research subject. Studies have found associations between the ability to fly silently and the presence of micro-fringes in owl wings. These trailing-edge (TE) fringes play a crucial role in suppressing the noise produced by wing ...

Incheon National University researchers propose a web 3.0 streaming architecture and marketplace

Incheon National University researchers propose a web 3.0 streaming architecture and marketplace
2024-01-23
Web 3.0 is an internet paradigm that is based around blockchain technology, an advanced database mechanism. Compared to Web 2.0, the current internet paradigm, Web 3.0 provides some added advantages, such as transparency and decentralized control structures. This is because Web 3.0 is designed to work over trustless and permissionless networks. Unfortunately, owing to certain technical difficulties, the implementation of Web 3.0 media streaming requires modifications to the service architecture of existing media streaming services. These difficulties include the degradation ...

Major climate benefits with electric aircraft

Major climate benefits with electric aircraft
2024-01-23
Aviation has grown considerably in recent decades and accounts for approximately 2 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions and some 4 percent of all climate change impacts annually. While aviation is an important contributor to climate change and other environmental problems, electrification is one option for reducing these environmental impacts. The first electric aircraft are already in operation today and are mainly small planes used for pilot training and short flights in the immediate area. This is the type of plane that was studied in the life cycle assessment. “In the short-term future, battery-powered electric aircraft will probably mostly be used for shorter ...

Multi-generational toxicant exposures show cumulative, inherited health effects

2024-01-23
While exposure to a single substance like DDT has been shown to create inherited disease susceptibility, a recent study in animals found exposure to multiple different toxicants across generations can amplify those health problems. In the study, published in the journal Environmental Epigenetics, an initial generation of pregnant rats was exposed to a common fungicide, then their progeny to jet fuel and the following generation to DDT. When those rats were then bred out to a fifth unexposed generation, the incidence of obesity as well as kidney and prostate diseases in those animals were compounded, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Genome Research publishes a Special Issue on Long-read DNA and RNA Sequencing Applications in Biology and Medicine

Dementia risk prediction: Zero-minute assessment at less than a dollar cost

Children’s Hospital Colorado Heart Institute earns national recognition for excellence in cardiomyopathy care

Trial shows alcohol-mimicking medication can give laryngeal dystonia patients back their voice

Cigarette smoke alters microbiota, aggravates flu severity

Landmark study reveals over 100,000 American youth living with inflammatory bowel disease

Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area

Virtual reality could be gamechanger in police-civilian crisis encounters

Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests

Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods

An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria

Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs

CMU-Africa expands digital public infrastructure initiative across the continent

Study calls for city fashion waste shakeup

Scientists develop breakthrough culture system to unlock secrets of skin microbiome

Masseter muscle volume might be a key indicator of sarcopenia risk in older adults

New study unveils key strategies against drug-resistant prostate cancer

Northwestern Medicine, West Health, Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute collaboration to provide easier access to mental health care

New method reveals DNA methylation in ancient tissues, unlocking secrets of human evolution

Researchers develop clinically validated, wearable ultrasound patch for continuous blood pressure monitoring

Chromatwist wins innovate UK smart grant for £0.5M project

Unlocking the secrets of the first quasars: how they defy the laws of physics to grow

Study reveals importance of student-teacher relationships in early childhood education

Do abortion policy changes affect young women’s mental health?

Can sown wildflowers compensate for cities’ lack of natural meadows to support pollinating insects?

Is therapeutic hypothermia an effective treatment for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, a type of neurological dysfunction in newborns?

Scientists discover the molecular composition of potentially deadly venomous fish

What are the belowground responses to long-term soil warming among different types of trees?

Do area-wide social and environmental factors affect individuals’ risk of cognitive impairment?

UCLA professor Helen Lavretsky reshapes brain health through integrative medicine research

[Press-News.org] Study suggests that unintentional weight loss is a signal to see a doctor