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Science

Blood Protein Levels May Flag Risk of Diabetes and Death By Cancer, Shows Study (theguardian.com) 11

Doctors have identified a protein in the blood they believe could serve as an early warning sign for patients who are at risk of diabetes and death from cancer. From a report: Researchers in Sweden and China analysed two decades of health records from more than 4,500 middle-aged adults on the Malmo diet and cancer study. They found that those with the highest levels of prostasin, a protein that circulates in the blood, were almost twice as likely to have diabetes than those with the lowest levels. Some of those enrolled on the study already had diabetes, so the scientists looked at who among those without the disease went on to be diagnosed later. People in the top quarter for prostasin levels turned out to be 76% more likely to develop diabetes than those in the bottom quarter.

Dr Xue Bao, the first author on the study at the Affiliated hospital of Nanjing University medical school in China, said prostasin was a potential new "risk marker" for diabetes, but also death from cancer, particularly in people who have high blood sugar. Prostasin plays several roles in the body, such as regulating blood pressure and blood volume, and it also suppresses the growth of tumours that are fuelled by high blood sugar. While type 2 diabetes is known to raise the risk of certain cancers, including pancreatic, liver, bowel and endometrial tumours, the biological mechanisms are far from clear.

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Blood Protein Levels May Flag Risk of Diabetes and Death By Cancer, Shows Study

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  • The protein that inhibits tumours is also responsible for their development? That's what the summary suggests, but logic would suggest that there's a problem there.

    • I don't see the contradiction. There are a number of explanations. For example, similar to how a high-crime area gets more police, it could mean that the body makes more of that stuff to fight back when there's a tumor presence.

      • by jd ( 1658 )

        That wouldn't make the protein responsible for the development of tumours, it would make tumours responsible for the development of the protein.

        • They didn't say it was responsible for the development of the tumors, did they? But still, it isn't impossible for a tumor suppressor to actually be responsible for causing the tumors too. For example, the side effect of certain anti-cancer drugs, which work by damaging DNA, is that they might cause cancer with a certain probability. In that case, they are prescribed because the risk of worsening the cancer is lower than the chance of reducing the tumor. If you want a protein example, there's TGF Beta 1, Re

  • is cut your sugar intake to zero. All problems solved!

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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