Body Pain Linked to Higher Cancer Rates

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Body Pain Linked to Higher Cancer Rates

Body Pain Linked to Higher Cancer Rates


But Researchers Warn the Evidence Is Preliminary

June 2, 2003 -- Fibromyalgia patients and other people with unexplained body pain may be at increased risk for cancer. A study from the U.K. shows that people with body pain who had never been diagnosed with cancer subsequently had a higher incidence of cancer and reduced cancer survival, compared with people without widespread pain.

The investigation is the first to link body pain to a higher risk of developing cancer, and its authors caution that the findings are far from conclusive.

"These data have to be replicated in other studies, and until we do that I think we have to remain somewhat skeptical," study author Gary J. Macfarlane, MD, tells WebMD. "This may well be a chance finding, but it is important that we look into it further."

Widespread chronic body pain for which no cause can be found is the major feature of fibromyalgia, a condition that affects an estimated 3.7 million people -- mostly women -- in the U.S. In earlier research, Macfarlane and colleagues from England's University of Manchester investigated whether having widespread body pain affects life span. In his previous study, he demonstrated an increased death rate in people reporting widespread body pain. The increase in death rate was almost all related to cancer deaths.

"We didn't do this study because we believed these people had an increased risk of cancer," he says. "That was a complete surprise."

In this follow-up study, the researchers attempted to determine whether their earlier findings represented a real increase in cancer risk among patients with fibromyalgia-like pain, or whether the observation suggested delayed cancer diagnosis in these patients.

Roughly 6,000 subjects from the earlier study participated in the follow-up. A total of 15% had reported having widespread body pain, while 48% reported regional body pain and 37% reported no pain. None had been diagnosed with cancer when enrolled in 1991, but 395 developed the disease over the next nine years.

Cancer incidence was lowest among people who had reported having no pain in the original survey and was highest for those who reported widespread body pain. Breast, prostate, and colorectal cancers were diagnosed most frequently.
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