Circulating Steroid Hormones and the Risk of Prostate Cancer
- Gianluca Severi1,2,
- Howard A. Morris3,
- Robert J. MacInnis1,2,
- Dallas R. English1,2,
- Wayne Tilley3,4,
- John L. Hopper2,
- Peter Boyle5 and
- Graham G. Giles1,2
- 1Cancer Epidemiology Centre, The Cancer Council Victoria; 2Centre for Molecular, Environmental, Genetic and Analytical Epidemiology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; 3Hanson Institute; 4Dame Roma Mitchell Cancer Research Laboratories, Department of Medicine University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia; and 5IARC, Lyon, France
- Requests for reprints:
Gianluca Severi, Cancer Epidemiology Centre, The Cancer Council Victoria, 1 Rathdowne Street, Carlton, Victoria 3053, Australia. Phone: 61-3-9635-5412; Fax: 61-3-9635-5330. E-mail: Gianluca.severi{at}cancervic.org.au
Abstract
Epidemiologic studies have failed to support the hypothesis that circulating androgens are positively associated with prostate cancer risk and some recent studies have even suggested that high testosterone levels might be protective particularly against aggressive cancer. We tested this hypothesis by measuring total testosterone, androstanediol glucuronide, androstenedione, DHEA sulfate, estradiol, and sex hormone–binding globulin in plasma collected at baseline in a prospective cohort study of 17,049 men. We used a case-cohort design, including 524 cases diagnosed during a mean 8.7 years follow-up and a randomly sampled subcohort of 1,859 men. The association between each hormone level and prostate cancer risk was tested using Cox models adjusted for country of birth. The risk of prostate cancer was ∼30% lower for a doubling of the concentration of estradiol but the evidence was weak (Ptrend = 0.07). None of the other hormones was associated with overall prostate cancer (Ptrend ≥ 0.3). None of the hormones was associated with nonaggressive prostate cancer (all Ptrend ≥ 0.2). The hazard ratio [HR; 95% confidence interval (95% CI)] for aggressive cancer almost halved for a doubling of the concentration of testosterone (HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.32-0.95) and androstenedione (HR, 0.51; 95% CI, 0.31-0.83), and was 37% lower for a doubling of the concentration of DHEA sulfate (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.46-0.87). Similar negative but nonsignificant linear trends in risk for aggressive cancer were obtained for free testosterone, estradiol, and sex hormone–binding globulin (Ptrend = 0.06, 0.2, and 0.1, respectively). High levels of testosterone and adrenal androgens are thus associated with reduced risk of aggressive prostate cancer but not with nonaggressive disease. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2006;15(1):86–91)
- prostate cancer
- steroid hormones
- risk factors
- Genitourinary cancers: prostate
- Hormonal carcinogenesis
- Epidemiology
- hormones and receptors
Footnotes
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Grant support: VicHealth and The Cancer Council Victoria (cohort recruitment); National Health and Medical Research Council grants 251533, 209057, and 126402; and The Cancer Council Victoria.
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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- Accepted November 18, 2005.
- Received August 16, 2005.
- Revision received October 12, 2005.










