The Mail on Sunday

Men who wake for 30 minutes at night 20% more likely to get prostate cancer

- By Pat Hagan

MEN who wake in the night are 20 per cent more likely to develop prostate cancer, a study has revealed.

Researcher­s found that broken sleep patterns could be a major risk for the onset of the disease.

But the analysis suggested no link between late nights and cancer – nor any connection with problems getting to sleep in the first place.

Yet the dangers soar in men who consistent­ly stir for at least half-an-hour when the lights go off.

Prostate cancer affects some 50,000 men every year in the UK, and kills almost 12,000.

Major risk factors include getting older, a family history of the disease, obesity and ethnicity – with black men about twice as likely to develop a tumour. Disrupted sleep has been proposed as a cause of prostate cancer before, but most of the testing relied on patients accurately recalling how well they slept – a typically unreliable research method.

Experts at the US National Cancer Institute in Maryland instead analysed data on 30,000 British men who had taken part in studies where they wore a watch-like monitor to measure nighttime movements and sleep disruption.

None of the men had prostate cancer at the start of the investigat­ion.

The results, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, showed those recording 30 minutes or more of wakefulnes­s in the night were 15 to 20 per cent more likely to develop a tumour on the prostate later in life.

Scientists believe the danger comes from disruption to the circadian rhythm – the body’s internal clock – which in turn lowers levels of the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin. Previous studies have linked reduced levels with an increased risk of the cancer.

The Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer even lists sleep disruption as a ‘probable’ carcinogen – or cause of cancer.

In a report on the findings, the scientists said: ‘These results suggest frequent sleep disturbanc­es may be a prostate cancer risk factor.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom