A new study provides a major link
between low levels of vitamin D and aggressive prostate cancer. Northwestern
Medicine research showed deficient vitamin D blood levels in men can predict
aggressive prostate cancer identified at the time of surgery.
The finding is important because it
can offer guidance to men and their doctors who may be considering active
surveillance, in which they monitor the cancer rather than remove the prostate.
"Vitamin D deficiency may
predict aggressive prostate cancer as a biomarker," said lead investigator
Dr. Adam Murphy, an assistant professor of urology at Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine urologist. "Men
with dark skin, low vitamin D intake or low sun exposure should be tested for
vitamin D deficiency when they are diagnosed with an elevated PSA or prostate
cancer. Then a deficiency should be corrected with supplements."
Previous studies showing an
association between vitamin D levels and aggressive prostate cancer were based
on blood drawn well before treatment. The new Northwestern study provides a
more direct correlation because it measured D levels within a couple of months
before the tumor was visually identified as aggressive during surgery to remove
the prostate (radical prostatectomy).
The relationship between vitamin D
and prostate cancer may explain some disparities seen in prostate cancer,
especially among African American men. Prior research by Murphy and colleagues
showed African American men who live in low sunlight locations are up to 1½
times more likely to have vitamin D deficiency than Caucasian men.
But because vitamin D is a biomarker
for bone health and aggressiveness of other diseases, all men should check
their levels, Murphy said.
"All men should be replenishing
their vitamin D to normal levels," Murphy said. "It's smart
preventive health care."
Aggressive prostate cancer is defined
by whether the cancer has migrated outside of the prostate and by a high
Gleason score. A low Gleason score means the cancer tissue is similar to normal
prostate tissue and less likely to spread; a high one means the cancer tissue
is very different from normal and more likely to spread.
The study was published in the Journal
of Clinical Oncology Feb. 22. Murphy collaborated on the study with Rick
Kittles, associate director of cancer disparities at the University of Arizona
Cancer Center.
The study was part of a larger
ongoing study of 1,760 men in the Chicago area examining vitamin D and prostate
cancer. The current study included 190 men, average age of 64, who underwent a
radical prostatectomy to remove their prostate from 2009 to 2014.
Of that group, 87 men had aggressive
prostate cancer. Those with aggressive cancer had a median level of 22.7
nanograms per milliliter of vitamin D, significantly below the normal level of
more than 30 nanograms/milliliter. The average D level in Chicago during the
winter is about 25 nanograms/milliliter, Murphy noted.
Most people in Chicago should be on D
supplements, particularly during winter months, Murphy said.
"It's very hard to have normal
levels when you work in an office every day and because of our long
winter," he said. The Institute of Medicine recommends 600 international
units of D per day, but Murphy recommends Chicago residents get 1,000 to 2,000
international units per day.
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