STD Linked to Prostate Cancer
More Deaths in Men With History of Trichomoniasis
By
Salynn Boyles
WebMD Health News
Reviewed By
Louise Chang, MD
Latest Sexual Health News
Sept. 11, 2009 -- Infection with a common sexually transmitted disease (STD) may make men
more vulnerable to the most deadly form of prostate cancer, new research suggests.
Men in the study who had been infected with the STD trichomoniasis
were only slightly more likely to develop prostate cancer years later, compared
to men with no documented evidence of prior infection.
But they were nearly three times as likely to die of the disease once they
had prostate cancer, epidemiologist and study co-author Lorelei A. Mucci, ScD,
tells WebMD.
"Our finding suggests that infection may make prostate cancers more
aggressive and more likely to progress," she says.
STD and Prostate Cancer
Trichomoniasis affects both men and women and as many as 7.4 million new
infections occur each year, according to the CDC.
The STD is caused by the parasite Trichomonas vaginalis.
Though easily treated with medication, 50%-75% of
men with trichomoniasis never develop symptoms so they never find out they have
the STD. And many, but not all, clear the infection in a matter of weeks
without treatment. Also, people can be reinfected even after treatment.
At least one previous study has suggested a link between trichomoniasis and
more aggressive prostate cancers, but that study was smaller and had shorter
follow-up than the one reported by Mucci and colleagues in the Sept. 9 online
version of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Using data from an ongoing trial involving more than 22,000 male physicians
first recruited in 1982, the researchers compared prostate cancer incidence and
outcomes among men with and without evidence of infection with the STD.
In all, 673 men who went on to develop prostate cancer and 673 men without
cancer matched to the patients for age, smoking status,
and follow-up time were included in the analysis.
A history of trichomoniasis infection was confirmed by testing stored blood
samples drawn from the men soon after they entered the study.
The samples revealed a slight, but not statistically significant, increase
in prostate cancers among men with evidence of a prior infection.
But men who had evidence of prior infection of the STD when they entered the
study were far more likely to develop aggressive prostate cancers and they were
more likely to die of their cancer.
Detecting Aggressive Prostate Cancer
Infection leads to inflammation, and inflammation has long been suspected of
playing a leading role in the development and progression of prostate
cancer.
Although previous studies examining other STDs have largely failed to show
an association with prostate cancer, most did not have the long follow-up that
the newly reported study did, American Cancer Society director of prostate
cancer Durado Brooks, MD, MPH, tells WebMD.
"We can say from this study that there may be a link between this sexually
transmitted infection and more aggressive prostate cancer, but more research is
needed to confirm this," he says.
If the link is confirmed, the finding could offer much needed insight into
which prostate cancers will become deadly and which will not, he says.
The introduction of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing in the late
1980s led to a doubling in the number of prostate cancers diagnosed
annually.
It has become clear in recent years that many of the cancers found with PSA
testing are not likely to progress, but determining which patients need
aggressive treatment and which do not remains a problem.
"We need more markers to tell us at the time of diagnosis how aggressive a
cancer will be," Brooks says.
SOURCES: Stark, J.R. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Sept. 9, 2009; online edition. News release, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
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