STUDY FINDS LINK BETWEEN TESTICULAR CANCER AND GYM SUPPLEMENTS

Men who reported taking muscle-building supplements, such as pills and powders with creatine or androstenedione, reported a significantly higher likelihood of having developed testicular cancer than men who did not use such supplements, according to a study by Li et al in the British Journal of Cancer.
Moreover, said study senior author Tongzhang Zheng, DSc, the associated testicular germ cell cancer risk was especially high among men who started using supplements before age 25, those who used multiple supplements, and those who used them for years.
“The observed relationship was strong,” said Dr. Zheng, who led the study at Yale University School of Public Health, before joining the Brown University School of Public Health as Professor of Epidemiology. “If you used [supplements] at [an] earlier age, you had a higher risk. If you used them longer, you had a higher risk. If you used multiple types, you had a higher risk.”
Increasing Incidence of Testicular Cancer
Testicular cancer incidence rose to 5.9 cases per 100,000 men in 2011, from 3.7 cases in 100,000 in 1975, Dr. Zheng said. Researchers aren't sure why.
“Testicular cancer is a very mysterious cancer,” he said. “None of the factors we've suspected can explain the increase.”
The study is the first analytical epidemiologic study of the possible link between supplements and testicular cancer. Research was inspired by mounting evidence that at least some supplement ingredients may damage the testes.
“Our study found that supplement use was related to a higher risk of developing testicular cancer. These results are important, because there are few identified modifiable risk factors for testicular cancer,” said Russ Hauser, MD, MPH, ScD, Professor of Environmental Health Science at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Study Finds Significant Risk
Dr. Zheng's research team conducted detailed interviews of nearly 900 men from Massachusetts and Connecticut—356 of whom had been diagnosed with testicular germ cell cancer, and 513 who had not. In the interviews, researchers asked the men not only about their supplement use, but also about a wide variety of other possible factors, such as smoking, drinking, exercise habits, family history of testicular cancer, and prior injury to the testes or groin.
After tallying their data and accounting for all possible confounders, as well as age, race, and other demographics, the researchers found that men who used supplements had a 1.65 odds ratio (a 65% greater risk) of having developed testicular cancer compared to the men who did not use supplements.
The researchers defined “use” as consuming one or more supplements at least once a week for four consecutive weeks or more.
The odds ratios increased to 2.77 (a 177% greater risk) among men who used more than one kind of supplement, and to 2.56 among men who used supplements for 3 years or longer. Men who started using supplements at age 25 or younger also had an elevated associated odds ratio of 2.21, the researchers calculated.
“Considering the magnitude of the association and the observed dose-response trends, muscle-building supplement use may be an important and modifiable exposure that could have important scientific and clinical importance for preventing testicular germ cell cancer development, if this association is confirmed by future studies,” the study authors concluded.
Future large epidemiologic studies and laboratory experiments would be necessary to establish a causal link between supplements and testicular cancer.
Dr. Zheng is the corresponding author for the British Journal of Cancer article.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, The Beijing Natural Science Foundation, and the Beijing Nova Program.

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