City
Epaper

Scientists link type 2 diabetes with some obesity-related cancers

By IANS | Updated: March 23, 2025 10:06 IST

London, March 23 A new diagnosis of type 2 diabetes (T2D) has been linked to a subsequent increase ...

Open in App

London, March 23 A new diagnosis of type 2 diabetes (T2D) has been linked to a subsequent increase in the risk of developing some, but not all, obesity related cancers, according to new research.

Previous research has described associations between type 2 diabetes mellitus and higher risk of several obesity-related cancers.

However, it remains unclear whether these associations are causal, due to confounding (their mutual risk factor of obesity); immortal time bias (many studies combine prevalent and new-onset T2D); or time detection bias (for example, the co-diagnosis of two relatively common conditions at the same time).

In this study, to be presented at European Congress on Obesity (ECO 2025, Malaga, Spain, 11-14 May), the authors aimed to address these previous methodological flaws.

They performed a matched cohort control study within UK Biobank of new-onset T2D (defined by date of first reported non-insulin dependent diabetes) versus unexposed individuals matched (1 participant to 3 controls) on body mass index (BMI), age, and sex.

A total of 23,750 participants with T2D were matched with 71,123 controls. Over a median follow-up time of 5 years, there were 2431 new primary cancers among T2D participants and 5184 new primary cancers among matched controls.

The data analysis showed new-onset T2D was associated with a 48 per cent increased risk of obesity related cancers in men and a 24 per cent increased risk in women – an effect independent of BMI. However, there were no associations with several site-specific ORCs – notably, endometrial, and post-menopausal breast cancer in women

There were positive associations found – new onset T2D increased the risk for bowel cancer by 27 per cent in men and 34 per cent in women; for pancreatic cancer by 74 per cent in men and a near-doubling of risk in women. For liver cancer new onset T2D was associated with a near-quadrupling of risk in men and near 5-fold increased risk in women.

“At this stage, we are unsure whether these differences in men and women are due to a sex-dependent biological pathway such as hormone levels, insulin sensitivity, body fat composition, or due to a simple difference in the number of cancers found in men and women within UK Biobank by chance,” said the study authors.

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

International"Strategic disaster": Nikki Haley urges Trump to treat India as "prized free, democratic" partner

InternationalJaishankar emphasises need for steady partners, warns against over-dependence on limited markets

InternationalJaishankar focuses on easing trade barriers and boosting connectivity at IRIGC-TEC in Moscow

InternationalChinese envoy highlights 10 points of consensus in talks between India, China SRs on boundary question

InternationalIndia rejects Nepal's objection to Lipulekh trade agreement with China, calls territorial claims "untenable"

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia successfully test-fires Agni-5 ballistic missile, validates strategic capabilities

TechnologyAdvanced therapies, tech key to tackle rare disease burden in India: CDSCO, NITI Aayog

TechnologyGaming worse than drugs, several lost lives after savings wiped out: Ashwini Vaishnaw

TechnologyIndia’s workforce goes AI-first as frontier firms lead transformation: Report

TechnologyEurope sets new records for mosquito-borne West Nile virus, chikungunya disease: ECDC