Women who are overweight or obese have up to twice the risk of developing colorectal cancer before age 50 as women who have what is considered a normal body mass index, according to a new study.
Overall rates of new colorectal cancer cases and deaths from the disease have decreased steadily since 1980 in the United States, largely owing to recommended colonoscopy screening starting at age 50.
But for reasons that remain unknown, new cases of, and deaths due to, both colon and rectal cancers have been increasing for younger adults ages 20 to 49.
The new study, which appears in JAMA Oncology, is among the first epidemiologic analyses of the potential contributors to early-onset colorectal cancer—those cases diagnosed in people younger than 50.
Obesity epidemic
Higher current BMI, BMI at 18 years of age, and weight gain since early adulthood are associated with increased risk of colorectal cancer under age 50, the findings show.
The study included data from 85,256 women ages 25 to 44 in the Nurses’ Health Study II, which began in 1989. Researchers have collected detailed information on body weight throughout the life course, family and endoscopy histories, and lifestyle factors at study baseline and every two to four years. Up to 2011, doctors diagnosed 114 colorectal cancer cases under age 50.
“…we were surprised by the strength of the link and the contribution of obesity and weight change since early adulthood.”
“Our findings really highlight the importance of maintaining a healthy weight, beginning in early adulthood for the prevention of early-onset colorectal cancer,” says co-senior author and cancer epidemiologist Yin Cao assistant professor of surgery in the Public Health Sciences division at Washington University in St. Louis.
“We hypothesized that the obesity epidemic may partially contribute to this national and global concern in early-onset colorectal cancer rates, but we were surprised by the strength of the link and the contribution of obesity and weight change since early adulthood.”
Family history
Compared with women with the lowest BMIs (18.5-22.9 kilograms per square meter), women with the highest BMIs (greater than 30) had almost twice the risk of early-onset colorectal cancer.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the normal BMI range is 18.5-24.9 kilograms per square meter. BMIs from 25-29.9 are considered overweight, and BMIs greater than 30 are considered obese.
Early-onset colorectal cancer remains relatively rare at about eight cases per 100,000 people, but since these populations do not receive routine screening, people often don’t get a diagnosis until later stages of the disease, making them much more difficult to treat.
The researchers estimated that roughly 22 percent of early-onset colorectal cancer could have been prevented had all participants had a normal BMI between 18.5-24.9. On a population scale, this represents thousands of potentially preventable colorectal cancer cases among the younger population. Further, higher risk of early-onset colorectal cancer associated with increasing BMI held even among women with no family history of the disease.
The American Cancer Society recently lowered the recommended age at which most people should undergo a first screening colonoscopy. The new guidelines recommend screening beginning at age 45, down from the previous recommendation of age 50.
Risk factor surrogate?
More research is necessary, including additional validation studies as well as cost-benefit analyses, to see if BMI should be considered in deciding the appropriate age an individual should begin screening or complement current screening efforts, Cao says.
The researchers emphasize that this is an association study—it doesn’t establish that increasing weight is a cause of early-onset colorectal cancer. It is possible BMI could be serving as a surrogate for other risk factors that may influence colorectal cancer risk, including metabolic syndrome and diabetes, which also have been increasing at the population level.
More studies are needed to uncover the best ways to identify young people at high risk of colorectal cancer at younger ages. And since this study was limited to women who were predominantly white, more research is necessary to see if these associations hold for men and for diverse racial and ethnic populations.
“Emerging data also suggest that early-onset colorectal cancer may be different on a molecular level from cases diagnosed at older ages,” Cao says. “Because early-onset colorectal cancer is rare, we need more collaborative research to understand why case rates and deaths among younger people are increasing and what could be done to slow them down.”
Additional researchers are from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Massachusetts General Hospital at Harvard Medical School.