Tim Byers Presentations International Congress on Obesity

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Obesity as a cause of cancer: Epidemiologic and biologic mechanisms Tim Byers MD MPH University of Colorado Cancer Center Colorado School of Public Health [email protected]

Transcript of Tim Byers Presentations International Congress on Obesity

Page 1: Tim Byers Presentations International Congress on Obesity

Obesity as a cause of cancer: Epidemiologic and biologic mechanisms

Tim Byers MD MPH

University of Colorado Cancer Center

Colorado School of Public Health

[email protected]

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Cause ?

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Causes of car crashes

• Vehicle factors– Manufacture, maintenance

• Road factors– Design, maintenance

• Driver factors– Biologic, behavioral

• Weather

• Bad luck

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Correlates of obesity• Behavioral

– Diet– Physical activity– Medical care

• Physiologic– Hormonal– Other growth factors– Inflammation– Micronutrients– Microbiome– Epigenome

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BMI

Cancer

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BMI

Cancer

Intermediaries Micronutrients Hormones Other growth factors Inflammation Immune function

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BMI

CancerActivity

Diet

Intermediaries Micronutrients Hormones Other growth factors Inflammation Immune function

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Obesity may be the most important of all the nutritional

risk factors for cancer

• Many sites

• Men and women

• Preventable

• Modifiable

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WCRF conclusions for ObesityConvincing

• Postmenopausal Breast• Endometrial• Colorectal• Esophagus• Pancreas• Kidney

Probable• Premenopausal breast (reduced risk)• Gallbladder• Ovarian

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BMI and cancerCancer BMI

Increment RR of increased body fatness (95% CI) WCRF

Report date

Ovarian 5kg/m2 1.06 (1.02-1.11) 2013Endometrial 5kg/m2 1.50 (1.42-1.59) 2012Pancreatic 5kg/m2 1.10 (1.07-1.14) 2012Colorectal 1kg/m2 1.02 (1.02-1.03) 2011Postmenopausal breast 2kg/m2 1.05 (1.03-1.07) 2010Premenopausal breast 2kg/m2 0.97 (0.95-0.99) 2010Kidney 5kg/m2 1.31 (1.24-1.39) 2007Gallbladder 5kg/m2 1.23 (1.15-1.32) 2007Oesophageal no analysis 2007

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WCRF estimates of preventable fraction of specific cancer sites from body fatness

Source: www.wcrf.org/cancer_statistics/preventability_estimates/preventability_estimates_body_fatness

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Breast Cancer

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BMI and Breast Cancer

Premenopausal Post-menopausal

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Postmenopausal breast cancer risk and circulating estradiol

Quartile 1 Quartile 2 Quartile 3 Quartile 4

RR

Hankinson et al. JNCI 1998;90:1292-9 BMI

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Circulating Sex Hormone Binding Globulin and postmenopausal BMI

BMI

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Mechanisms linking obesity and breast cancer

• Estrogens• SHBG• Cytokines • Insulin • IGF / IGFBP3 • Innocent bystander ?

– Probably not

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Obesity and risk of breast cancer recurrence

• Recurrence risk increased among obese (BMI > 30) vs normal weight (BMI<25)

• Obesity risk seen in various subgroups– Postmenopausal– Premenopausal– ER positive– ER negative– Even with Tamoxifen

Obese

Not obese

Months

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sur

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Obesity and mortality after breast cancer diagnosis

• Protani et al. BC Res Treat 123:627-35 (2010)• Metanalysis of 43 studies

• HR = 1.33 (1.21 to 1.47)

• Pre-men HR = 1.47; Post-men HR = 1.22

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Endometrial Cancer and BMI(CUP 2013)

RR=1.50 ( 1.42-1.59) per 5 kg/m2 I2= 86% n=25

Mechanisms:

Estrogens

Estrogens

Estrogens

Estrogens

Cytokines

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Ovarian Cancer and BMI(CUP 2014)

RR=1.06 ( 1.02-1.11) per 5 kg/m2 I2 =55% n=25

Mechanisms:

Cytokines?

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Colorectal Cancer

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Colorectal cancer and nutrition

• Many nutritional factors associated with risk

– Obesity

– Physical inactivity

– F&V intake

– Red meats

– Alcohol

– Calcium

– Fiber

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Colorectal Cancer and BMI(CUP 2011)

RR=1.02 (1.02-1. 03) per 1 kg/m2 I2 =60% n=23

Mechanisms:

Cytokines ?

Insulin ?

IGF ?

Innocent bystander ? (maybe so)

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CRC recurrence and BMI

• Meyerhardt et al. J Clin Oncol 26:4109-15 (2008)

• CALGB CRC adjuvant trials

• Neither BMI nor weight change were related to recurrence or survival

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Obesity and esophageal cancer

Very different histology and risk factor profiles for cancers of the upper vs lower esophagus

Upper 2/3 of esophagus (squamous cell)TobaccoAlcohol

Lower 1/3 of esophagus (adenocarcinoma) BMI

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Mechanisms linking obesity and

esophageal cancer

• GERD

• Cytokines ?

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Pancreatic Cancer and BMI(CUP 2012)

R =1.10 ( 1.07- 1.14) per 5 kg/m2 I2=19% n=23

Mechanisms:

Cytokines

Insulin

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Liver Cancer and Excess Body Weight (EBW) and Obesity

Chen et al European J of Cancer 2012

Mechanisms:

Fatty liver

Cytokines

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Prostate cancer and obesity

• Not a strong factor overall

• May be associated with more aggressive disease

• Mechanisms not understood

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Obesity related diseases

• Heart disease• Stroke• Diabetes• Cancer• Sleep apnea• Arthritis• Reproductive complications• Gall bladder disease• Others

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DM, CVD

Cancer

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Behavioral factorsDietPhysical activityAdiposity

DM, CVD

Cancer

Metabolic factorsInsulin, IGFCytokines Hormones

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How can we determine causal pathways?

• Measure effect modification– Works only for strong associations

• Conduct interventions– Modulate weight and measure effects on cancer– Modulate weight and measure effects on mediators– Modulate mediators and measure effects on cancer

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How can we determine causal pathways?

• Measure effect modification– Works only for strong associations

• Conduct interventions– Modulate weight and measure effects on cancer– Modulate weight and measure effects on mediators– Modulate mediators and measure effects on cancer

• Draw pictures– Combining imagination, hope, and PowerPoint is

intellectually hazardous

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Does intentional weight loss reduce breast cancer risk ?

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How can we know that weight loss will reverse cancer risk?

• Observational epidemiology

• Randomized controlled trials– (large trials with cancer endpoints)

• Understanding of intermediary factors– (proof of their modulation in small trials)

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Breast cancer risk with weight change after menopause

Eliassen et al. JAMA 296:193-201 (2006)

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Weight change and endometrial cancer risk

• Trentham-Dietz et al. Int J Epid 35:151-8 (2006)

• Case-control study (740:2342)

• OR = 0.7 for weight loss

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Cancer risk after bariatric surgery

• Sjostrom et al. Lancet Oncol 10:653-62 (2009)

• 14% to 27% wt losses followed for 15 years

• Women: HR = 0.58

• Men: HR = 0.97

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Breast cancer risk reduction compared to weight loss in 3 RCTs

Wt loss BC reduction

WHEL 0 pounds 0%

WHI 2 pounds 9%

WINS 6 pounds 20%

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ENERGY Trial• Collaboration between 4 US cancer centers

– Colorado (Tim Byers)– Alabama (Wendy Demark)– Saint Louis (Graham Colditz)– San Diego (Cheryl Rock)

• 700 women 0.5 to 5 years after stage 1-2 BC treatment

• Randomized to group weight loss program vs control aimed at 7% weight loss differential

• Vanguard for a 2400 patient trial with recurrence endpoint

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RCT’s of intentional weight loss and changes in cancer-relevant mediators

• Estradiol is reduced

• SHBG is increased

• Several cytokines are reduced– CRP, IL6, TGF-alpha, leptin, others

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CRP reduction with weight loss

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Why do we need to understand obesity-cancer intermediaries?

• Complete our understanding of cancer biology

• Create surrogates for cancer in trials

• Identify targets for prevention

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Recommendations for research• Find better ways to reduce obesity

• Invest in large-scale weight loss trials with cancer endpoints

• Better understand the several mechanisms and test their change in focused weight loss trials

• Thereby find ways to pharmacologically unlink obesity and cancer

Page 47: Tim Byers Presentations International Congress on Obesity

Obesity as a cause of cancer: Epidemiologic and biologic mechanisms

Tim Byers MD MPH

University of Colorado Cancer Center

Colorado School of Public Health

[email protected]