Cancer Diagnoses After Recent Weight Loss

Weight loss is common in primary care. Among individuals with recent weight loss, the rates of cancer during the subsequent 12 months are unclear compared with those without recent weight loss. To determine the rates of subsequent cancer diagnoses over 12 months among health professionals with weigh...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2024-01, Vol.331 (4), p.318-328
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Qiao-Li, Babic, Ana, Rosenthal, Michael H, Lee, Alice A, Zhang, Yin, Zhang, Xuehong, Song, Mingyang, Rezende, Leandro F M, Lee, Dong Hoon, Biller, Leah, Ng, Kimmie, Giannakis, Marios, Chan, Andrew T, Meyerhardt, Jeffrey A, Fuchs, Charles S, Eliassen, A Heather, Birmann, Brenda M, Stampfer, Meir J, Giovannucci, Edward L, Kraft, Peter, Nowak, Jonathan A, Yuan, Chen, Wolpin, Brian M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Weight loss is common in primary care. Among individuals with recent weight loss, the rates of cancer during the subsequent 12 months are unclear compared with those without recent weight loss. To determine the rates of subsequent cancer diagnoses over 12 months among health professionals with weight loss during the prior 2 years compared with those without recent weight loss. Prospective cohort analysis of females aged 40 years or older from the Nurses' Health Study who were followed up from June 1978 until June 30, 2016, and males aged 40 years or older from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study who were followed up from January 1988 until January 31, 2016. Recent weight change was calculated from the participant weights that were reported biennially. The intentionality of weight loss was categorized as high if both physical activity and diet quality increased, medium if only 1 increased, and low if neither increased. Rates of cancer diagnosis during the 12 months after weight loss. Among 157 474 participants (median age, 62 years [IQR, 54-70 years]; 111 912 were female [71.1%]; there were 2631 participants [1.7%] who self-identified as Asian, Native American, or Native Hawaiian; 2678 Black participants [1.7%]; and 149 903 White participants [95.2%]) and during 1.64 million person-years of follow-up, 15 809 incident cancer cases were identified (incident rate, 964 cases/100 000 person-years). During the 12 months after reported weight change, there were 1362 cancer cases/100 000 person-years among all participants with recent weight loss of greater than 10.0% of body weight compared with 869 cancer cases/100 000 person-years among those without recent weight loss (between-group difference, 493 cases/100 000 person-years [95% CI, 391-594 cases/100 000 person-years]; P 
ISSN:0098-7484
1538-3598
1538-3598
DOI:10.1001/jama.2023.25869