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Date Submitted:
12/11/07
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Prostate Cancer Survival Varies by Season
Description:
SUNDAY, Oct. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Men diagnosed with prostate cancer in the summer and fall have a better chance of survival than those diagnosed in the spring and winter, a new study of Norwegian men suggests.
"Summer and autumn months correspond to times when vitamin D is highest (in Norway). Although the study does not prove vitamin D is the determining factor, it does suggest that this possibility should be studied further," study co-author Dr. Tomasz Beer, director of the prostate cancer program at the Oregon Health & Science University Cancer Institute, said in a prepared statement. In the study, a team of American and Norwegian researchers analyzed data for more than 46,000 Norwegian men diagnosed with prostate cancer from 1964 to 1992. Compared with men diagnosed in the summer and fall, those diagnosed in the winter and spring were 20 percent more likely to die within three years after diagnosis. The study was published in the journal The Prostate. The researchers Read the Complete Article Similar content: Surgery Best Bet for Prostate Cancer Survival, in Prostate Cancer Better Prostate Cancer Survival for Men Taking Statins, in Prostate Cancer Most Asian Men Have Better Prostate Cancer Survival Rates, in Prostate Cancer Robotic Procedure Improves Survival for Prostate Cancer Patients, in Prostate Cancer Prostate Cancer Gene Also Raises Colon Cancer Risk, in Prostate Cancer |

