Does testosterone cause prostate cancer?
One of the lingering concerns and questions for men is whether
increased testosterone levels, either naturally produced or in the form
of prescription replacement therapy, can cause prostate cancer. However,
not only does testosterone NOT cause prostate cancer, it may actually
help protect against it, while another hormone appears to be the main
culprit in promoting prostate cancer.
At
last year's American Urological Association Annual Meeting, the results
of a meta-analysis indicated that natural and prescription testosterone
(endogenous and exogenous, respectively) do not cause prostate cancer or
trigger increases in level of prostate-specific antigen (PSA).
This was the widest review of studies ever undertaken that showed
testosterone, on its own, did not cause prostate cancer.
The medical experts who undertook the study conducted two different
analyses.
One included 18 studies involving 5,091 patients with prostate cancer
and 11,930 controls and looked at the impact of endogenous testosterone.
No relationship was found between T levels and risk of prostate cancer.
The second analysis reviewed data from 24 placebo-controlled trials
involving men with hypogonadism (clinically low testosterone levels) who
took testosterone replacement therapy.
Again, the experts concluded that testosterone replacement therapy
did not appear to increase the risk, nor an increase in PSA levels.
Oestrogen factor
The paradox of testosterone and prostate cancer risk is that prostate
cancer risk increases as a man ages at the same time that a man's normal
testosterone levels start to decline.
This suggests that having too little testosterone could be a factor
and that something else- perhaps too much oestrogen - could be a factor
as well.
Does oestrogen cause prostate cancer?
Oestrogen as a cause of prostate cancer is gaining lots of attention.
At least in rats, experts know that testosterone plus oestrogen are
necessary for the development of prostate cancer.
In men, however, the research findings thus far have been mixed, with
a few studies indicating an association between oestrogens (16) and
chronically high oestrogens (17) and an increased risk of cancer, but
others showing the opposite.
It's widely accepted that a man's testosterone: oestrogen ratio
should be in balance; that is, higher levels of testosterone than of
oestrogen. Because testosterone can be changed into oestrogen via an
enzyme called aromatase, the critical point is to adopt habits that help
reduce the activity of this enzyme. This includes maintaining a healthy
weight, losing excess belly and body fat (as fat promotes oestrogen
production), limiting or avoiding alcohol (as alcohol is oestrogenic and
also affects the metabolism of testosterone), maintaining healthy blood
sugar levels, and taking natural supplements.
Does high testosterone protect against prostate cancer?
Testosterone therapy
As for evidence that men who have higher levels of testosterone are
protected against prostate cancer, the jury is still out. However, a
European Urology report noted that numerous reports have shown that men
who receive testosterone therapy after treatment for localised prostate
cancer have shown no or low recurrence rates. Some men with untreated
cancer who have taken T therapy also have not had any progression of
their disease.
One recent (November 2015) study, for example, involved 98 men with
hypogonadism (excessively low T) who were treated with testosterone
therapy after they received radiation for prostate cancer. Use of
testosterone therapy raised T levels from a mean of 209 ng/dL before
treatment to 420 ng/dL. At the same time, there was a non-significant
increase in PSA levels.
Based on the studies and latest research, it does not appear that
testosterone causes prostate cancer, nor that it has a negative impact
on men who already have the disease. At the same time, another hormone-oestrogen
-seems to play the main role in the disease. Signs and symptoms of
elevated oestrogen in men - low libido, breast development, risk of
stroke and heart attack, infertility, weight gain - are the same as
those associated with low testosterone, so oestrogen, not testosterone,
is a hormone that needs to be managed and reduced as part of living a
healthy and cancer free life.
I talk a lot about this in my book - and actually devote a complete
chapter to it as it's so important.
-Easy Health Options
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