학술논문

Low Free Testosterone and Prostate Cancer Risk: A Collaborative Analysis of 20 Prospective Studies
Document Type
article
Source
European Urology. 74(5)
Subject
Cancer
Clinical Research
Prevention
Urologic Diseases
Prostate Cancer
Aging
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Adult
Aged
Biomarkers
Case-Control Studies
Down-Regulation
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Grading
Prospective Studies
Prostatic Neoplasms
Protective Factors
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Testosterone
Time Factors
Androgens Pooled analysis
Prospective studies
Prostate cancer
Sex hormones
Epidemiology
Androgens
Pooled analysis
Clinical Sciences
Urology & Nephrology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundExperimental and clinical evidence implicates testosterone in the aetiology of prostate cancer. Variation across the normal range of circulating free testosterone concentrations may not lead to changes in prostate biology, unless circulating concentrations are low. This may also apply to prostate cancer risk, but this has not been investigated in an epidemiological setting.ObjectiveTo examine whether men with low concentrations of circulating free testosterone have a reduced risk of prostate cancer.Design, setting, and participantsAnalysis of individual participant data from 20 prospective studies including 6933 prostate cancer cases, diagnosed on average 6.8 yr after blood collection, and 12 088 controls in the Endogenous Hormones, Nutritional Biomarkers and Prostate Cancer Collaborative Group.Outcome measurements and statistical analysisOdds ratios (ORs) of incident overall prostate cancer and subtypes by stage and grade, using conditional logistic regression, based on study-specific tenths of calculated free testosterone concentration.Results and limitationsMen in the lowest tenth of free testosterone concentration had a lower risk of overall prostate cancer (OR=0.77, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.69-0.86; p