Doctor and his colleagues found an increased correlation between BMI and risk for colorectal neoplasia for women but not for men. BMI has been shown to be a risk for colon cancer, but we looked at colorectal neoplasia because our quest was to see how it impacted screening. When we screen, we really dont screen for cancer; we screen for significant colorectal pathology, defined as villous, large tubular adenomas larger than 1 cm, high-grade dysplasia, adenocarcinam and multiple polyps. We found that when we looked at significant neoplasia, there was an increase in (overweight) women but not me. We could not explain the apparent difference in neoplasia risk between overweight men and women. The gender discrepancy is really unclear, he said, but he hypothesized that it may be related to the difference of fat distribution in men and women.
We also questioned whether menopausal status could have influenced the results, though that variable was not considered in the study. I raise the issue of menopause because estrogen may reduce the risk of colorectal polyps and cancer, and estrogen levels decrease with age, though women with higher BMIs tend to retain greater levels of estrogen during and after menopause. In their analysis, also examined the role of diabetes and the use of statin drugs and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, none of which were identified as independent risk factors. The findings, suggest that community gastroenterologists may want to consider more aggressive counseling of obese patients about the importance of losing weight and thereby lowering their risk for colorectal cancer.
In view of these finding, gastroenterologists should play a role in discussing weight and its health implications with their patients, especially in light of the increasing rate of obesity. Typically, BMI should constitute a colorectal cancer risk factor for both genders. She added that data on BMI and the risk for colorectal cancer among women have been conflicting, and that closer scrutiny of factors such as hormone replacement therapy among postmenopausal women which appears to reduce the risk of colorectal cancer is warranted. The main thing we need to know is why (BMI) matters more for women than for men. If you think the biology of colon polyps progressing to colon cancer is similar in men and women, then why is there this difference between the genders? Thats the key question.