City
Epaper

Diabetes, obesity increases risk of liver cancer relapse: Study

By IANS | Updated: October 3, 2024 12:20 IST

New Delhi, Oct 3 Diabetes and obesity can fuel the relapse of liver cancer -- the sixth most ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 3 Diabetes and obesity can fuel the relapse of liver cancer -- the sixth most common cancer worldwide, according to a study.

The study led by Osaka Metropolitan University, focussed on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) -- a type of liver cancer associated with hepatitis infections -- known to have a high recurrence rate after cancer removal. It is also the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths globally.

Obesity and diabetes, which are closely associated with metabolic syndrome development, are well known to induce steatotic liver diseases, potentially causing liver cirrhosis and HCC development.

However, obesity and diabetes’ effects on patient survival and cancer recurrence have been unclear.

“Because the risk of late recurrence is higher in hepatocellular carcinoma with comorbid obesity and diabetes, controlling obesity and diabetes is an important treatment strategy for the liver cancer,” said Dr. Hiroji Shinkawa’s research team at the University’s Graduate School of Medicine.

In the study, published in the journal Liver Cancer, the team analysed the relationship between diabetes mellitus, obesity, and postoperative outcomes in 1,644 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who underwent liver resection.

The results revealed that obesity increased the risk of recurrence two years after the operation approximately by 1.5 times, and in the case of diabetes, the risk was 1.3 times higher.

In addition, the risk of recurrence after five years postoperatively was 3.8 times higher with obesity, while with diabetes it was 2 times higher.

The findings can contribute to the early detection of cancer recurrence and the design of appropriate treatment strategies, Shinkawa said.

Obesity is a common risk factor for type 2 diabetes, and the two conditions are often linked.

Recent research showed that the number of adults with obesity will increase by six times in the next 40 years, while people with diabetes will soar 642 million by 2040.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsPKL 12: Bengaluru Bulls crush Gujarat Giants 54–26 to seal top-four spot

NationalMeeting of southern states' Urban Development Ministers in B'luru on Oct 30 with Manohar Lal in attendance: DKS

NationalOp Sindoor delivered a heavy ‘dose’ to Pakistan: Rajnath Singh

CricketLitton Das returns as Bangladesh name squad for first two T20Is against West Indies

InternationalFire incidents expose industrial negligence in Bangladesh, says official

Health Realted Stories

HealthDengue claims two more lives in Bangladesh, 2025 death toll rises to 259

HealthMP: Over 125 injured by carbide guns; many face permanent blindness

HealthCDSCO flags 112 drug samples as ‘not of standard quality’ in September

HealthUS reports record measles cases since 1992

HealthSeason's 1st bird flu outbreak in Japan confirmed in Hokkaido