The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

Research indicates that lifestyle-related factors such as obesity, physical activity, and smoking influence breast and colorectal cancer survival, but less is known about the association between lifestyle-related factors and survival in males with prostate cancer (PC). Recent reviews have investigat...

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Main Authors: Darcey, Ellie, Pereira, Gavin, Salter, A., Fritschi, Lin, Leavy, Justine, Ambrosini, G.L., Boyle, Terry
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79458
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author Darcey, Ellie
Pereira, Gavin
Salter, A.
Fritschi, Lin
Leavy, Justine
Ambrosini, G.L.
Boyle, Terry
author_facet Darcey, Ellie
Pereira, Gavin
Salter, A.
Fritschi, Lin
Leavy, Justine
Ambrosini, G.L.
Boyle, Terry
author_sort Darcey, Ellie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Research indicates that lifestyle-related factors such as obesity, physical activity, and smoking influence breast and colorectal cancer survival, but less is known about the association between lifestyle-related factors and survival in males with prostate cancer (PC). Recent reviews have investigated the impact of obesity on PC survival; however the small number of studies and significant heterogeneity in results make it difficult to draw firm conclusions [1]. Few studies have investigated the association between physical activity and PC survival [2]. More is known about tobacco smoking: a 2018 meta-analysis concluded that tobacco smoking at diagnosis is associated with poorer all-cause mortality (ACM) and PC-specific mortality (PSM) [3]. In this cohort study we investigated associations between obesity, physical activity, and smoking status at or before diagnosis and ACM and PSM among males diagnosed with PC. Participants were 572 men aged 40–75 yr (median 63 yr) diagnosed with PC in 2001–2002 in Western Australia (WA) who had previously taken part in a case-control study [4]. Participants self-reported their smoking status (current vs former vs never), height, weight, and recreational physical activity at or around the time of diagnosis. Date and cause of death were obtained via linkage to the WA Cancer and Death Registries. Follow-up was from PC diagnosis to date of death or censoring on February 17, 2017, whichever came first. The median follow-up was 15 yr (15 yr for participants who survived), and 193 participants died during follow-up (76 from PC). The Human Research Ethics Committee at the WA Department of Health and Curtin University approved this study.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-794582020-09-04T03:58:19Z The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis Darcey, Ellie Pereira, Gavin Salter, A. Fritschi, Lin Leavy, Justine Ambrosini, G.L. Boyle, Terry Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Urology & Nephrology Research indicates that lifestyle-related factors such as obesity, physical activity, and smoking influence breast and colorectal cancer survival, but less is known about the association between lifestyle-related factors and survival in males with prostate cancer (PC). Recent reviews have investigated the impact of obesity on PC survival; however the small number of studies and significant heterogeneity in results make it difficult to draw firm conclusions [1]. Few studies have investigated the association between physical activity and PC survival [2]. More is known about tobacco smoking: a 2018 meta-analysis concluded that tobacco smoking at diagnosis is associated with poorer all-cause mortality (ACM) and PC-specific mortality (PSM) [3]. In this cohort study we investigated associations between obesity, physical activity, and smoking status at or before diagnosis and ACM and PSM among males diagnosed with PC. Participants were 572 men aged 40–75 yr (median 63 yr) diagnosed with PC in 2001–2002 in Western Australia (WA) who had previously taken part in a case-control study [4]. Participants self-reported their smoking status (current vs former vs never), height, weight, and recreational physical activity at or around the time of diagnosis. Date and cause of death were obtained via linkage to the WA Cancer and Death Registries. Follow-up was from PC diagnosis to date of death or censoring on February 17, 2017, whichever came first. The median follow-up was 15 yr (15 yr for participants who survived), and 193 participants died during follow-up (76 from PC). The Human Research Ethics Committee at the WA Department of Health and Curtin University approved this study. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79458 10.1016/j.eururo.2019.02.010 English ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV restricted
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Urology & Nephrology
Darcey, Ellie
Pereira, Gavin
Salter, A.
Fritschi, Lin
Leavy, Justine
Ambrosini, G.L.
Boyle, Terry
The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title_full The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title_fullStr The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title_short The Impact of Lifestyle-related Factors on Survival After a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
title_sort impact of lifestyle-related factors on survival after a prostate cancer diagnosis
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Urology & Nephrology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79458