Early Onset Baldness and Prostate Cancer Risk
Prostatic carcinoma is the leading cancer among American men, yet few risk factors have been established. Although increased androgen levels have long been associated with both prostatic carcinoma and baldness, to date no studies have shown an association between hair patterning and prostate cancer...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 2000-03, Vol.9 (3), p.325-328 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prostatic carcinoma is the leading cancer among American men, yet few
risk factors have been established. Although increased androgen levels
have long been associated with both prostatic carcinoma and baldness,
to date no studies have shown an association between hair patterning
and prostate cancer risk. A lack of standardized instruments to assess
baldness or the assessment of hair patterning during uninformative
periods of time may have precluded the ability of previous studies to
detect an association. We hypothesized that baldness, specifically
vertex baldness, should be assessed using standardized instruments and
during early adulthood if an association with prostate cancer risk is
to be found. To test this hypothesis, we included identical items
related to hair patterning in surveys that were administered in two
distinct prostate cancer case-control studies (Duke-based study,
n = 149; 78 cases; 71 controls and community-based
study, n = 130; 56 cases; 74 controls). In each,
participants were provided with an illustration of the Hamilton Scale
of Baldness and asked to select the diagrams that best represented
their hair patterning at age 30 and again at age 40. From these data,
the following five categories were created and compared: not bald
(referent group); vertex bald early onset (by age 30); vertex bald
later onset (by age 40); frontal bald early onset (by age 30); frontal
bald later onset (by age 40); and frontal (at age 30) to vertex bald
(at age 40). Separate analyses of the two studies are consistent and
suggest an association between vertex baldness and prostate cancer{
vertex bald early onset odds ratios, 2.44 [confidence interval
(CI), 0.57–10.46)] and 2.11 (CI, 0.66–6.73), respectively; vertex
bald later onset odds ratios, 2.10 (CI, 0.63–7.00) and 1.37
(CI, 0.47–4.06), respectively}. Although statistical significance
was not achieved in either one of these studies, the concordance
between the data suggests a need for future studies to determine
whether early onset vertex baldness serves as a novel biomarker for
prostate cancer and whether androgen production, metabolism, or
receptor status differs among these men when compared to those who
exhibit other types of hair patterning. |
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ISSN: | 1055-9965 1538-7755 |