THE RISK of developing prostate cancer is higher
among men who are overweight and obese - but there are also other factors which
can increase the chance of being affected by the disease.
Experts have revealed nearly 70 per cent of men in
the UK do not know that being overweight is a risk factor for prostate cancer.
Scientists have revealed strong evidence for a link
between excess body fat and an increased risk of 11 cancers - which includes
cancer of the prostate.
Prostate cancer is the most common male cancer -
which kills more than 11,250 men each year.
Experts at BMI Healthcare have revealed more than
half - 52 per cent - of men aren’t aware a family history is also a risk factor
for the cancer.
Just under half - 42 per cent don’t know that age also
plays a part in the incidence, mortality, and survival rates of the cancer.
According to the new figures, an overwhelming 97
percent of men in the UK don’t know that being tall affects your risk of
prostate cancer development.
Research has previously revealed greater height is
positively associated with prostate cancer risk.
The figures reveal 87 per cent don’t know the impact
of your ethnicity on prostate cancer risk - black men are more likely to get
prostate cancer than other men, which experts believe is genetic.
Researchers also found 86 percent aren’t aware that
taking anabolic steroids is a risk factor. Some people take the anabolic
steroids to help build muscles.
Other people take them to improve how they perform
at sports, such as sprinting and cycling.
John Beatty, Consultant Urologist at BMI Healthcare
said: “Prostate cancer is a cancer of the ageing male and is the most common
non-skin cancer in men over 70 but can occur at an earlier age.
Men who have fathers, brothers or grandparents with
prostate cancer may be at increased risk especially if they developed prostate
cancer at a young age.
Afro-Caribbean and black men may also have an
increased risk
Prostate cancer: Men on steroids can increase their
risk of prostate cancer.
A spokesman for BMI healthcare said: The research
reveals the concerning lack of knowledge around the warning signs of prostate
cancer.
Over half of men don’t know that having difficulty
emptying your bladder could indicate a tumour, 43 percent of men don’t realise
that blood in the urine or semen could be a symptom, and 43 percent of men also
aren’t aware that having to pass urine more frequently could be a sign.
Having the sudden urge to have to empty your bladder
is not known to be a symptom of prostate cancer by 67 per cent of men, and
similarly over half (52 percent) wouldn’t think having to get up in the night
more frequently than normal to empty their bladder was anything to worry about.
The 2017 study assessed 818 men in the UK,
highlighting the degree of awareness of prostate cancer symptoms.
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