A new study found that people with lower
vitamin D levels prior to treatment for follicular lymphoma succumb to the
disease or face relapse earlier than patients with sufficient vitamin D levels
in their blood.
The Wilmot Cancer Institute investigation
is believed to be the first to report that lack of vitamin D is a potentially
modifiable risk factor for this type of cancer. The study was published by the Journal
of Clinical Oncology.
Vitamin D's connection to cancer is an
active research topic. Prior studies have shown a survival benefit among
patients with higher vitamin D levels for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and
chronic lymphocytic leukemia. In addition, earlier peer-reviewed research at
Wilmot showed that low vitamin D levels among women with breast cancer
correlated with more aggressive tumors and poorer prognosis; and that vitamin D
deficiency among African Americans might help to explain higher death rates
from colorectal cancer.
Currently, Wilmot investigators are
evaluating whether weekly, high doses of vitamin D (50,000 IU) improves the
side effects related to androgen deprivation therapy for prostate cancer in
patients ages 65 and older.
Jonathan W. Friedberg, M.D., director of
the Wilmot Cancer Institute, and Jennifer Kelly, M.P.H., Ph.D., an
epidemiologist at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry,
led the collaborative follicular lymphoma study between SWOG, a component of
the NCI-sponsored National Clinical Trials Network, and the Lymphoma Study
Association (LYSA), based in France.
Researchers observed a total of 423
follicular lymphoma patients in two independent cohorts, who were followed for
a minimum of 5 ½ years each. They measured the patients' baseline vitamin D
blood levels before cancer treatment began, and then tracked and analyzed
cancer survival data for each group.
Future research might support prescribing
vitamin D supplements for patients at the earliest point of follicular lymphoma
treatment, when patients are typically monitored closely but have not started
active therapy, investigators concluded. They also suggested that vitamin D may
represent a proxy or biomarker for better health going into cancer treatment.
Follicular lymphoma is generally incurable
although it's slow-growing and many people live for years with the disease.
Risk increases with age, and an estimated 19,000 people annually are diagnosed
with FL. Treatments have improved recently, although a subset of patients have
an aggressive form for which therapy is not as effective. Better ways to
predict the course of the disease are needed, therefore -- and this is where
vitamin D levels might provide a previously unidentified but modifiable factor
associated with prognosis, Friedberg said.
"Our data, replicated
internationally, supports other published observations linking Vitamin D
deficiency with inferior cancer outcomes," he said. "However, the
mechanisms of this link are likely complex and require further study."
Large differences in vitamin D levels
among the patients in the two cohorts prevented scientists from being able to
recommend an optimal level of vitamin D for follicular lymphoma patients. (In
the U.S., vitamin D sufficiency is usually defined as 25 mg/ml.) Geographic
regions (including less sunny climates) and ethnicity and genetics (African
Americans often have lower levels that other races) influence baseline vitamin
D levels in people to a great extent, and would impact a threshold level.
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