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Gum Disease and Tooth Loss Boost Pancreatic Cancer RiskBy Neil Osterweil, Senior Associate Editor, MedPage TodayReviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. January 16, 2007 A humble toothbrush could be a powerful pancreatic cancer prophylaxis, suggest results of an observational study that associated periodontal disease with the malignancy. Men with periodontitis and tooth loss, or both, had an
overall 64% greater risk of cancer of the pancreas than men
with good oral health, showed data from Health Professionals
Follow-Up Study. The strength of the association was underlined by the
finding that men with periodontal who never smoked cigarettes
-- one of the few known risk factors for pancreatic cancer --
had a more than two-fold greater risk for the malignancy,
reported epidemiologist Dominique Michaud, Sc.D., of the
Harvard School of Public Health, and colleagues "Our study provides the first strong evidence that
periodontal disease may increase the risk of pancreatic
cancer. This finding is of significance as it may provide some
new insights into the mechanism of this highly fatal disease,"
said Dr. Michaud, in the Jan. 17 issue of the Journal of
the National Cancer Institute. The investigators hypothesized that systemic inflammation
may play a key role in the pathogenesis of pancreatic cancer,
an idea supported by the finding that people with periodontal
disease have elevated levels of inflammatory markers in serum,
most notably C-reactive protein. Alternatively, carcinogenic nitrosamines and high levels of
oral bacteria found in the mouths of people with periodontal
might interact with gastric acids to promote the development
of pancreatic cancer, Dr. Michaud said. She and colleagues extracted data on periodontal disease
from the Health Professionals Study, which followed a cohort
of more than 51,000 male health professionals from the ages of
40 to 75 years at baseline in 1986. The baseline questionnaire asked participants whether they
had ever had periodontal disease with bone loss, and the
participants were asked to report any tooth losses on biennial
follow-up questionnaires. During 16 years of follow-up, 216 men out of the original
51,529 in the study cohort were diagnosed with incident
pancreatic cancer. The authors created Cox proportional hazard models to
estimate relative risk and control for potential confounders,
including smoking, age, body mass index, diabetes, race,
physical activity, and dietary factors. They found that among all men with periodontal disease, the
multivariable relative risk for pancreatic cancer compared
with men with no periodontal disease was 1.64 (95% confidence
interval 1.19-2.26, P=0.002). The crude incidence
rate for pancreatic cancer among all men with periodontal
disease was 61/100,000 person-years, compared with 25/100,000
for all men in the cohort without periodontal
disease. When they restricted the analysis only to men who never
smoked, the investigators found that the relative risk of
cancer of the pancreas among those with periodontal disease
was 2.09 (95% CI, 1.18 -3.71; P=0.01). Among
never-smokers with gum disease and tooth loss, the crude
incidence rate was: 61/100,000 person-years, compared with
19/100,000 among all never-smokers with healthy
gums. The author also found that "increased severity of
periodontal disease, as manifested by periodontitis with
recent tooth loss, was associated with the greatest
risk." When they looked for an association between other measures
of oral health (e.g., caries) and pancreatic cancer, however,
they found that neither the baseline number of natural teeth,
nor cumulative tooth loss during follow-up were strongly
associated with increased risk for pancreatic cancer.
Dr. Michaud and colleagues noted that among the men in the
study with periodontal disease, levels of C-reactive protein
were 30% higher compared with men with no periodontal disease,
lending credence to the idea that inflammation could play a
role in carcinogenesis. "Alternatively, periodontal disease could influence
pancreatic carcinogenesis through increased generation of
carcinogens, namely nitrosamines," they wrote. "Individuals
with periodontal disease and poor oral hygiene have elevated
levels of oral bacteria and have much higher nitrosamine
levels in their oral cavity due to nitrate-reducing bacteria.
Nitrosamines and gastric acidity have been hypothesized to
have an important role in pancreatic cancer; numerous studies
support this hypothesis." The authors noted that their study was limited by the fact
that periodontal disease was self-reported, and the incidence
may have been subject to measurement error.
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