Does A Person’s Neighborhood Impact Their Risk of Pancreatic Cancer?

A Yale study explores how neighborhoods may affect pancreatic cancer risk.
Scrabble tiles spelling "pan-gen-tic cancer" to represent genetic cancer research.
A Yale study explores how neighborhood socioeconomic factors may influence pancreatic cancer risk.Anna Tarazevich/ Pexels
Author:
MBT Desk
Published on
Updated on

A new Yale-led study published in JNCI Cancer Spectrum is the first to examine the overall relationship between pancreatic cancer and neighborhood-level socioeconomic factors.

Pancreatic cancer is an aggressive disease that often remains silent, leading to diagnoses at later stages when it is more difficult to treat. Although there have been recent treatment advances, researchers still have many questions about why pancreatic cancer develops and how to screen for it.

“For some common cancers, a person’s neighborhood is correlated with their likelihood of developing the disease.”

Louise Wang, MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (digestive diseases) at Yale School of Medicine

A female doctor in a white coat writes notes on a piece of paper at her desk, focused on her work.
Researchers examined whether genetics, lifestyle, or neighborhood factors have a greater impact on pancreatic cancer risk.cottonbro studio/ Pexels

“We wanted to understand if this holds true for pancreatic cancer. Are individual-level risk factors, like genetics and lifestyle, the most significant, or do neighborhood-level factors play a role in the development of this cancer?” says Louise Wang, MD, assistant professor of medicine (digestive diseases) at Yale School of Medicine and senior author of the study.

The researchers used Veterans Health Administration (VA) area deprivation index data, which measures neighborhood disadvantage across categories such as income, education, housing quality, and other factors. They identified 31,242 veterans diagnosed with the most common form of pancreatic cancer who also had area deprivation index data available.

The study found that veterans living in neighborhoods with the highest level of advantage had a slightly increased risk of being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. This was true even when accounting for clinical and lifestyle risk factors for pancreatic cancer.

“We were not expecting to see that individuals living in neighborhoods with higher incomes, education levels, and other forms of advantage would have increased risk of pancreatic cancer,” says Wang. “It’s possible that in those neighborhoods there is increased screening and surveillance, so people are diagnosed at a higher rate.”

Wang notes that the risk level was still very minimal compared to other individual-level risk factors, like smoking and alcohol use. Additionally, individuals in the most advantaged neighborhoods were slightly older, which may have played a role, though the study adjusted for age and factors related to mortality. She also hopes that future research will explore whether other health systems show similar results.

As part of their ongoing work to improve early detection of pancreatic cancer, Wang and her colleagues are conducting several research projects using VA data to investigate how different factors, including hepatitis C, pollution-related exposures, and unique military exposures, affect the development of pancreatic cancer.

“The VA has so much data, including really good geographical information, which makes it an excellent place to study the risk factors that could help us better prevent, screen, and diagnose pancreatic cancer to help patients get better outcomes,” Wang says.

Digestive Diseases, one of 10 sections in the Yale Department of Internal Medicine, is committed to advancing gastrointestinal and liver health through exceptional patient care, scientific discovery, and education in a collaborative environment. To learn more, visit Digestive Diseases.

(Newswise/HG)

Scrabble tiles spelling "pan-gen-tic cancer" to represent genetic cancer research.
Tumor-on-a-Chip Reveals How Pancreatic Cancer Hijacks Immune Cells
logo
Medbound Times
www.medboundtimes.com