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Organ size increases with obesity and correlates with cancer risk

Authors :
Zhang, Haley Grant Yifan
Li, Lu
Wang, Yan
Kawamoto, Satomi
Pénisson, Sophie
Fouladi, Daniel F.
Shayesteh, Shahab
Blanco, Alejandra
Ghandili, Saeed
Zinreich, Eva
Graves, Jefferson S.
Park, Seyoun
Kern, Scott
Hooper, Jody
Yuille, Alan L.
Fishman, Elliot K
Chu, Linda
Tomasetti, Cristian
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Obesity increases significantly cancer risk in various organs. Although this has been recognized for decades, the mechanism through which this happens has never been explained. Here, we show that the volumes of kidneys, pancreas, and liver are strongly correlated (median correlation = 0.625; P-value<10-47) with the body mass index (BMI) of an individual. We also find a significant relationship between the increase in organ volume and the increase in cancer risk (P-value<10-12). These results provide a mechanism explaining why obese individuals have higher cancer risk in several organs: the larger the organ volume the more cells at risk of becoming cancerous. These findings are important for a better understanding of the effects obesity has on cancer risk and, more generally, for the development of better preventive strategies to limit the mortality caused by obesity.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.13112
Document Type :
Working Paper