London: One in six Britons with high blood sugar levels faces a greater danger of developing cancer, according to new research.
The findings are worrying because an estimated 10.1 million people in the UK have high blood-sugar, largely as a result of unhealthy lifestyles, especially eating foods containing a lot of sugar, salt or fat.
Excess blood sugar means someone could be more likely both to develop cancer and also to die from it, according to research in the Public Library of Science Medicine journal. Women were more vulnerable than men and high blood sugar is linked to a range of different cancers for each gender, it found .
Vulnerable
The 10.1 million people include 2.6 million diagnosed diabetics, 500,000 others who have the disease but do not know it, and a further seven million who have pre-diabetes, a precursor to the full-blown condition.
Scientists at Umea University in Sweden, funded by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF), examined blood sugar levels in 274,126 men and 275,818 women from Norway, Austria and Sweden with an average age of 44.8, then followed them up a decade later to see how many had developed or died from cancer. They write: "Significant increases in risk among men were found for incident and fatal cancer of the liver, gallbladder, and respiratory tract, for incident thyroid cancer and multiple myeloma, and for fatal rectal cancer. In women, significant associations were found for incident and fatal cancer of the pancreas, for incident urinary bladder cancer, and for fatal cancer of the uterine corpus, cervix uteri and stomach."
Significant
Dr Tanja Stock, the lead researcher, said: "The results suggest that, for women, the higher the level of sugar in the blood, the higher the risk. For men, there was still an association, but it was weaker."
The study is significant because it found that the increased likelihood of cancer occurred regardless of the participants' body mass index levels. It does not prove that blood glucose of itself leads to cancer, but it suggests that it might promote tumour growth by acting as a source of fuel for tumour cells, especially proliferative cells.
Dr Panagiota Mitrou, the WCRF's science programme manager, said the findings "raise the possibility that controlling blood sugar levels may be a way to reduce risk of some cancers."
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