Hello. I am Dr. Gerald Chodak for Medscape. Today's topic is the role
of metabolic syndrome in men with prostate cancer. Haggstrom
and coworkers
[1]
published in
Cancer a large cohort series on nearly 300,000 men who were followed over a course of about 12 years.
What they attempted to determine was whether having symptoms
of metabolic syndrome was associated with an increased risk of
developing prostate cancer. The authors found no such
association. However, they did find that men who had metabolic syndrome
were more likely to be dying from prostate cancer, the risk
for which was associated with elevated body mass index, elevated
blood pressure, or abnormal glucose or triglyceride blood
levels.
The significance of this is the following. We know that many
men who progress from prostate cancer are likely to develop metabolic
syndrome as a consequence of androgen deprivation. Although
we are getting better at treating men with progressive metastatic
prostate cancer, the fact is that we may be falling far
short of addressing potentially resolvable problems that contribute
to their overall death.
I don't think that urologists are primed for evaluating
patients for metabolic syndrome, monitoring it, or ensuring that
patients
are getting the care that they need to make sure that the
syndrome is being addressed. What does that mean going forward?
First, we need to alert our patients to these side effects
and symptoms, encouraging them to try to moderate their weight,
get exercise, monitor their glucose levels, get their blood
pressure managed properly, and address triglyceride levels that
may be abnormal.
That may be outside the realm of the urologist. However, it
does require careful attention, and urologists need to do a better
job of ensuring that their patients with progressive
prostate cancer are receiving care in the area of addressing metabolic
syndrome. That means that not only is better patient
education needed, but physicians need to be tuned in to the seriousness
of these side effects. As urologists, we tend to think more
about the cancer with blinders on and don't address the peripheral
association that happens as a result of the treatments that
we administer.
But it is becoming clearer all the time that metabolic
syndrome is serious. It contributes to the mortality of men with
prostate
cancer and, more than likely, there is a great opportunity
for improving the management of our patients to address some of
these problems. Hopefully you will find this information
useful. I look forward to your comments. Thank you.
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