Literature DB >> 27767045

Association between allergic conditions and risk of prostate cancer: A Prisma-Compliant Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Jianguo Zhu1,2,3, Jukun Song4, Zezhen Liu1,2, Jin Han5, Heng Luo1,2, Yunlin Liu6, Zhenyu Jia1,2, Yuanbo Dong3, Wei Zhang4, Funeng Jiang1,2, Chinlee Wu1,7, Zaolin Sun3, Weide Zhong1,2.   

Abstract

Association between allergic conditions and prostate cancer risk has been investigated for many years. However, the results from available evidence for the association are inconsistent. We conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate the relationship between allergic conditions (asthma, atopy, hay fever and "any allergy") and risk of prostate cancer. The PubMed and Embase databases were searched to screen observational studies meeting our meta-analysis criteria. Study selection and data extraction from included studies were independently performed by two authors. Twenty studies were considered eligible involving 5 case-control studies and 15 cohort studies. The summary relative risk (RR) for developing prostate cancer risk was 1.04 (95%CI: 0.92-1.17) for asthma, and 1.25 (95%CI: 0.74-2.10) for atopy, 1.04 (95%CI: 0.99-1.09) for hay fever, 0.96 (95%CI: 0.86-1.06) for any allergy. In the Subgroup and sensitivity analysis, similar results were produced. Little evidence of publication bias was observed. The present meta-analysis of observational studies indicates that no indication of an association between allergic conditions and risk of prostate cancer was found, and the meta-analysis does not support neither the original hypothesis of an overall cancer protective effect of allergic conditions, nor that of an opposite effect in the development of prostate cancer.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27767045      PMCID: PMC5073359          DOI: 10.1038/srep35682

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


Prostate cancer is one of most frequently diagnosed cancer in Western countries and is the second most common cancer in men, following lung cancer, worldwide12. In 2015, up to 220,800 men were diagnosed with prostate cancer, and 27,540 men will die of it in the United States1. The incidence and mortality rates of prostate cancer vary markedly among different ethnic groups, with the lowest rates found in China and other parts of Asia and the highest rates detected in Western populations3. The etiology of prostate cancer comprises multiple factors. Established risk factors for prostate cancer included obesity, old age, ethnicity, androgen, and environmental factor, androgen, and diet4567. There are some studies addressing systematic inflammation conditions and immune response that contribute to prostate tumorigenesis89. Allergy-related carcinogenesis is a topic of interest but has generated considerable controversy. Considering the impact of the prostate cancer risk potentially resulting from allergic diaseases, a number of studies have explored the association between allergic diseases and prostate cancer risk10111213141516171819. However, individual studies have yielded inconsistent or conflicting findings, possibly caused by limitation associated with an individual study. In a previous meta-analysis of studies (only included nine studies), asthma, hay fever and allergy were not associated with prostate cancer risk, but not for atopy20. Two additional studies were not included in the meta-analysis2122. Subsequent publishing studies have also found inconsistent results of associations between allergic disease and prostate cancer risk, with positive association23242526, inverse association27, and no association28293031. To shed light on these contradictory results and to more precisely evaluate the relationship among allergic diseases and prostate cancer, we performed an up-dated meta-analysis of published studies. Nevertheless, clarifying a relationship might emphasize the importance of considering additional preventative methods for prostate cancer. The study was reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews32.

Results

Literature search

Following the development of our search strategy, 1,890 records were initially retrieved. After excluding the duplicates and articles that did not meet the inclusion criteria, we reviewed 34 possible relevant studies in full-text. A total of 14 studies were excluded for the following reasons: Two articles were covered the same population2731; six articles were narrative reviews333435363738; one article reported the association allergic disorders and pancreatic cancer39; and six articles were not related to outcome of interest404142434445. Finally, 20 studies that met inclusive criteria were included in the meta-analysis (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Flow diagram of selection of studies included in the meta-analysis.

Study characteristics

The Tables 1 and 2 shows the descriptive data for all included studies. A total of 20 studies, comprising 5 case-control studies with 2,924 incident cases and 7,175 controls and 15 cohort studies including 16,526 cases and 1,681,562 pariticipants, contributed to the meta-analysis. These studies were published from 1985 to 2015. The number of prostate cancer patients ranged from 1 to 6,294 in the case-control studies and from 10 to 1,936 in the cohort studies. Ten studies were conducted in Europe10121314172324282930, six in the North America111618192231, two in Australia1525 and two in Asia2126. Eighteen studies reported findings for prostate cancer incidence101112131416171819212223242526282931, whereas only two studies reported results for prostate cancer mortality1630. We included a total of 5,757 prostate cancer deaths, 16,526 prostate cancer cases in the meta-analysis. The maximum numbers (1,102,247) of participants were from the Canada prospective study and minimum number (1,522) were from Australia prospective study in the cohort studies, while the maximum incident patients (1,936) were from the Canada Montreal PROtEuS study and minimum incident patients (10) were from Japan study in the case-control studies. The exposure categories that were measured were: 1) asthma; 2) hay fever (rhinitis); 3) atopy; and 4) any allergy (atopy and/or asthma, hay fever, or other allergic disease). For the assessment of allergic conditions, allergen-specific IgE measurement, skin prick testing, self-reported questionnaire, interviews by medical staff, and hospital discharge register were employed. For the assessment of prostate cancer, fourteen studies reported that cancers were histologically confirmed or were identified from national/regional cancer registeries, which we assumed verified the cancer pathologically. The remaining studies based their cancer diagnoses on different criteria; admission/discharge diagnoses; an automated general practice database; a linked national death register; review of hospital and nursing home recorder and death certificates. Six studies were designed to evaluate OR101718192231, five evaluated HR1525262930, three evaluated RR11162128, while five studies compared observed cancer incidence rates in cohort of patients with asthma or hay fever/allergic rhinitis against expected numbers estimated from population-based cancer registries and their effect estimates were standardized incidence ratio (SIR)13142324 or standardized mortality ratio(SMR)12.
Table 1

Characteristic of cohort/nested case-control studies included in the meta-analysis.

StudyYearCountryStudy designNo. of casesCohort sizeStudy periodAge, Median (Range), yrsExposureExposure assessmentCancer identificationFollow-up period (years)Adjustment for covariates
Mcwhorter1988USAA prospective cohort study (NHANESI)3461081971–1984NA(25–74)Any allergyThe physician-diagnosed allergyHospital or nursing home records or on death certificate10Adjusted for age, race, and smoking status.
Mills1992USAA cohort study18034,1981977–1982NAAsthma; hay fever; any allergyA detailed life-style questionnaire on medical historyMedical records and cancer registries6Adjusted age, smoking history, and time since last physician contact.
Kallen1993SwedenA cohort study67164,3461969–1983NAAsthmaHospital discharge registerSwedish cancer registries and death registries14NA
Vesterinen1993FinlandA cohort study25677,9521970–1987NA(35–84)AsthmaFinish social insurance institution’s file of asthma patientsFinnish cancer registry17NA
Eriksson1995SwedenA cohort study16,5931976–198931(16–80)AsthmaSkin prick tests;Swedish national tumor registries13NA
Talbot-Smith2002AustraliaA prospective cohort study861,5221981–1999Men:50.7;Women:50.0Asthma; hay fever; atopySelf-reported physician-diagnosed allergy and skin prick testingLinkage to death registrations and Australian cancer registry8Adjusted for age, smoking status, and body mass index.
Gonzalez-Perez2005SpainA nested case-control study4079,4881994–2000NA(20–79)AsthmaAutomated general practitioner recordsAutomated general practitioner records6Adjusted for age, calendar year, BMI, alcohol intake, smoking status, prior comorbidities (cardiovascular disease, diabetes, osteoarthirtis, and rheumatoid arthritis), health services utilization, use of aspirin, NSAID, and paracetamol using logistic regression.
Turner2005CanadaA prospective cohort study5,674 (mortality)1,102,2471982–2000NA(≥30)Asthma; hay fever; any allergySelf-reported physician-diagnosed allergyNational death index18Adjusted for race, smoking, education, body mass index, exercise, alcohol drinking, family history of prostate cancer, and consumption of vegetables, fat, and red meat.
Ji2009SwedenA cohort study1008140,4251965–2004NAAsthmaThe Swedish hospital discharge registerCancer register-identified cases40NA
Severi2010AustraliaA prospective cohort study (Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study (MCCS))1,17916,3941990–2007NA(27–81)AsthmaA structure interview schedule and history of medical conditionsAustralia state cancer registry13.4Adjusted for age, country of birth, education, body mass index, fat and fat-free mass, smoking, alcohol consumption, and total energy intake.
Hemminki2014SwedeA cohort study404138,7231964–2010NAHay fever/allergic rhinitisHospital Discharge RegisterSwedish Cancer RegistryNANA
Skaaby2014DanishA prospective population-based cohort study17514,8491976–2008Nonatopic:46.3 ± 10.9; Atopic 43.7 ± 10.4AtopySerum specific IgE positivity measurementsDanish cancer registry11.8Adjusted for age (age is underlying time axis), education, physical activity, smoking habits, alcohol intake, and BMI.
Platz2015SwedenA prospective population-based cohort study (Health Professionals Follow-up Study)629447, 8801986–2012NA(40–75)Asthma; hayfeverQueationnaireMedical and pathology reports (90%)26Adjusted for age, race (African-American, Asian, other ancestry and white), first-degree family history of prostate cancer, height (inches), body mass index (BMI, kg/m2, updated), BMI at the age of 21 years (kg/m2), vigorous physical activity (MET-hours/week, updated), diabetes (updated) and cigarette smoking in the past 10 years (pack-years, updated).
Su2015Taiwan (China)A population-based case-cohort study7412,3721997–200854.87(15–65+)AsthmaMedical claims dataProstate cancer claim records and histopathologic findings or significantly elevated prostate-specific antigen with radiologic evidence of metastasis5.05Adjusted for age, residential area, insurance premium, hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, duration of hospitalization, and mortality.
Taqhizadeh2015NetherlandsA general population-based cohort study83(mortality and hospitalization)8,4651965–2008NA(20–65)AsthmaPeripheral blood eosinophil counts; Skin prick tests; Serum total Immunoglobulin E (IgE)Hospital admission register43Adjusted for age, Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 s (FEV 1) as % of predicted, BMI (all at the first survey), and place of residence.
Table 2

Characteristic of case-control studies included in the meta-analysis.

StudyYearCountryStudy designNo. of casesNo. of controlsStudy periodAge, Median (Range), yrsExposuresExposure assessmentCancer identificationAdjustment for covariates
Vena1985USAA retrospective case-control study26315621957–1965NAAsthma, hay feverSelf-completed questionnaire and medical history interviewAdmissions with cancerAdjusted for age and smoking.
Ohrui2002JapanA case-control study1012021995–2000Case:68; control:69AsthmaClinical diagnosisClinical diagnosisNA
Wang2006GermanyA case-control study31819042000–2003NA(50–74)Asthma, hay fever, atopy, any allergyAllergen-specific LgE measurement; questionnaire on physician diagnosed allergyHistologically confirmed cancersAdjusted for age, education, body mass index, family history of cancer (first degree), smoking status and alcohol consumption.
El-Zein2010Canada (Montreal)A population-based case-control study3975121979–1986NA(35–70)Ashtma, eczemaSelf-reported history of medical conditionsHistologically confirmed cancers.Adjusted for age, income, respondent status, ancestry, smoking, and farming.
Weiss2014Canada (Montreal)A population-based case-control study (Montreal PROtEuS study)193619952005–2009Case:63.6; Control 64.8Asthma, allergy; hay feverSelf-reported asthma and allergyQue´becn Tumour registery (80%)Adjusted for age, ancestry and familial history of prostate cancer.
Adjusted effect estimates could be determined for most cohort and case-control studies. Most risk estimates were adjusted for age (n = 12)101115171819222526283031, smoking (n = 10)10111516171819252829 and body mass index (n = 8)1015161725282930. Some studies were also controlled for alcohol consumption (n = 5)1016172529 and race (n = 3)161928, but few studies were adjusted for family history of prostate cancer (n = 2), total energy intake (n = 1)25, and intake of vegetable and red meat (n = 1)16. None of the studies were adjusted for exposure to heavy metals and androgen. The methodological quality of the included studies was generally good. The NOS scores ranged from five to seven (Table 3). The median NOS score was 6.0.
Table 3

Quality assessment of eligible studies based on Newcastle-Ottawa scale.

AuthoryearSelectionComparabilityExposure
Vena1985212
Mcwhorter1988312
Mills1992311
Kallen1993302
Vesterinen1993302
Eriksson1995302
Ohrui2002302
Talbot-Smith2002312
Lightfoot2004312
Turner2005322
Gonzalez-Perez2005322
Wang2006322
Ji2009302
Severi2010322
Hemminki2014302
Weiss2014312
Skaaby2014322
Platz2015322
Su2015322
Taqhizadeh2015322

Asthma and risk of prostate cancer

The association of asthma with prostate cancer was investigated in 17 studies1011121314151617182122242526283031. Thirteen studies reported HR/RR/OR10111516171821222526283031, while four studies reported the SIR/SMR12131424. The combined relative risk was 1.04 (95%CI: 0.92–1.17), with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.000; I2 = 73.2%), while the pooled SIR was 1.00 (95%CI: 0.68–1.47), with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.000; I2 = 97.7%) (Fig. 2). In subgroup and sensitivity analysis, the results showed basically consistent with the overall analysis (Table 4). When we stratified the analysis by geographic region, the pooled RR was 0.95 (95%CI: 0.81–1.12) for studies conducted in North America, 0.90 (0.81–1.00) for studies conducted in Europe, and 4.55 (0.23–89.94) for studies conducted in Asia. In the subgroup analysis stratified by NOS quality, the combined RR was 1.90 (95%CI: 0.29–12.61) for low quality studies and 1.02 (95%CI: 0.93–1.13) for high quality studies. We restricted each analysis to study design, the combined RR was 1.02 (95%CI: 0.91–1.15) among case-control studies and 1.20 (94%CI: 0.69–2.09) among cohort studies, respectively. Nevertheless, when we stratified the analysis by adjusted for age, race, BMI, cigarette smoking and alcohol drinking, asthma was also not associated with risk of prostate cancer. In a sensitivity analysis, similar results were observed, which ranged from 1.01 (95%CI: 0.88–1.16) with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.000, I2 = 73.7%) (excluding the study by Severi G et al.25) to 1.07 (95%CI: 0.93–1.23) with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.000, I2 = 69.2%) (excluding the study by Platz et al.28). Only four of studies on asthma specially investigated advanced prostate cancer risk (advanced prostate cancer was defined as T3-4 and PSA > 50 ng/ml or Gleason grade ≥ 8) and asthma2528, the summary RR was 0.86 (95%CI: 0.54–1.37), with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.079; I2 = 67.6%). Egger funnel plot asymmetry test (P = 0.865) and Begg rank correlation test (P = 0.502) were performed to assess publication bias and the funnel plot symmetry (Fig. 3) was examined. Finally, no proof of publication bias was obtained. Because of limited number of studies, we fail to conduct subgroup and sensitivity, publication analysis for studies reported the SIR or SMR.
Figure 2

Forest plot of asthma and relative risk/standardized incidence ratio of prostate cancer.

Table 4

Results of subgroup analysis of asthma, hay fever, atopy, and any allergy.

Subgroup analysisAsthma
Hay fever
Atopy
Any allergy
NRR(95%CI)I2(%)P valueNRR(95%CI)I2(%)P valueNRR(95%CI)I2(%)P valueNRR(95%CI)I2(%)P value
Total131.04(0.92–1.17)73.20.00061.04(0.99–1.09)0.00.42831.25(0.74–2.10)73.20.02460.96(0.86–1.06)19.30.287
Study design
 Cohort study81.02(0.91–1.15)68.00.00331.03(0.93–1.14)56.10.10321.31(0.43–4.01)81.90.01931.06(0.84–1.33)48.90.142
 Case-control study51.20(0.69–2.09)82.50.00031.02(0.76–1.36)0.00.84811.35(1.00–1.83)NANA30.88(0.75–1.04)0.00.497
Geographic region
 North America50.95(0.81–1.12)20.90.28140.97(0.88–1.06)0.00.699    50.96(0.84–1.10)35.20.187
 Europe40.90(0.81–1.00)0.00.69821.07(1.01–1.09)0.00.52221.05(0.62–1.77)77.20.03610.98(0.66–1.45)NANA
 Asia24.55(0.23–89.94)94.30.000            
 Australia21.36(0.98–1.90)32.90.222    12.49(1.04–5.93)NANA    
NOS score
 High101.02(0.93–1.13)61.40.00641.02(0.94–1.11)33.20.21331.25(0.79–2.10)73.20.02450.93(0.86–1.00)0.00.612
 Low31.90(0.29–12.61)90.60.00021.15(0.78–1.70)0.00.715    11.25(0.93–1.69)NANA
Adjusted for confounders or important risk factors Age
 yes101.02(0.88–1.18)55.60.01651.07(1.01–1.13)0.00.95121.59(0.93–2.71)41.00.19350.99(0.82–1.19)34.10.194
 no31.04(0.92–1.17)73.20.00010.95(0.86–1.05)NANA10.79(0.53–1.18)NANA10.94(0.86–1.02)NANA
Race
 yes20.90(0.81–1.00)0.00.76941.07(0.84–1.36)0.00.872    20.94(0.87–1.03)0.00.380
 no111.10(0.93–1.29)69.50.00021.02(0.90–1.14)75.90.04231.25(0.74–2.10)73.20.02440.97(0.79–1.18)44.40.145
Cigarette smoking
 yes80.99(0.84–1.17)62.70.00951.03(0.96–1.00)17.50.30331.25(0.74–2.10)73.20.02431.06(0.84–1.33)48.90.142
 no51.17(0.88–1.56)79.20.00111.09(0.74–1.61)NANA    30.88(0.75–1.04)0.00.497
Alcohol drinking
 yes91.07(0.89–1.28)77.20.00041.07(1.01–1.13)0.00.96321.05(0.62–1.77)77.20.03650.99(0.82–1.19)34.10.194
 no41.04(0.83–1.24)65.80.03220.95(0.85–1.05)0.00.84312.49(1.04–5.93)NANA10.96(0.86–1.06)NANA
BMI
 yes71.02(0.87–1.20)62.80.01331.01(0.92–1.12)0.00.91631.25(0.79–2.10)73.20.02420.94(0.87–1.02)0.00.839
 no61.08(0.80–1.45)78.20.00031.12(0.85–1.48)54.90.109    41.00(0.79–1.26)50.50.108
Figure 3

Funnel plot of asthma and relative risk of prostate cancer.

Hay fever and risk of prostate cancer

The association of hay fever with prostate cancer was examined in 7 studies10111618232831. The six studies reported RR/OR101116182831 (Fig. 4), while SIR was reported in only one study, which reported a positive association between hay fever/allergic rhinitis and prostate cancer risk23. The combined relative risk was 1.04 (95%CI: 0.99–1.09), with low heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.428; I2 = 0.0%). Subgroup and sensitivity analysis produced similar results (Table 4). In subgroup analysis stratified by geographic region, asthma was not associated with risk of prostate cancer (RR: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.88–1.06) in the four studies in North Ameria, but not in the two studies in Europe (RR:1.07; 95%CI: 1.01–1.13). Compared with a low NOS score (RR = 1.02, 95%CI: 0.94–1.11), the association was higher among studies with high NOS score (RR = 1.15, 95% CI: 0.78–1.70). When we restricted each analysis to study design, the combined RR was 1.03 (95%CI: 0.93–1.14) among case-control studies and 1.02 (95%CI: 0.76–1.36) cohort studies, respectively. When the analysis was restricted to studies adjusted for race, BMI and cigarette smoking, we found no association between asthma and prostate cancer, but not for studies adjusted for age and alcohol drinking. In a sensitivity analysis, similar results were observed, which ranged from 0.97 (95%CI: 0.88–1.06) with low heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneit = 0.360, I2 = 9.0%) (excluding the study by Platz et al.28) to 1.07 (95%CI: 1.01–1.13) with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneit = 0.025, I2 = 58.4%) (excluding the study by Turne et al. which reported the association between asthma and mortality of prostate cancer16). Both the Begg rank correlation test (P = 0.707) and the Egger linear regression test (P = 0.775) in the meta-analysis indicated no significant publication bias. Because number of included studies less than 10, we did not perform the funnel plot.
Figure 4

Forest plot of hay fever and relative risk of prostate cancer.

Atopy and risk of prostate cancer

The association of atopy with prostate cancer was investigated in 3 studies101529. The combined relative risk was 1.25 (95%CI: 0.74–2.10), with notable heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.024; I2 = 73.2%) (Fig. 5). In subgroup and sensitivity analysis, the results showed basically consistent with the overall analysis (Table 4). The include studies achieved six or more stars and considered to be of high quality, so the result was consistent with overall analysis. When the analysis was restricted to studies adjusted for age, race, BMI, alcohol drinking and cigarette smoking, we found no association between asthma and prostate cancer. In a sensitivity analysis, similar results were observed, which ranged from 1.05 (95%CI: 0.62–1.77) with low heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.036, I2 = 77.6%) (excluding the study by Talbot-Smith et al.15) to 1.59 (95%CI: 0.93–2.71) with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity  = 0.193, I2 = 41.0%) (excluding the study by Skaaby et al.29). Both Egger’s test (P = 1.000) and Bgger’s test (P = 0.761) showed no publication bias. Because number of included studies less than 10, we did not perform the funnel plot.
Figure 5

Forest plot of atopy and relative risk of prostate cancer.

Any allergy and risk of prostate cancer

The association of asthma with prostate cancer was investigated in 6 studies101116192231. The combined relative risk was 0.96 (0.86–1.06), with low heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.287; I2 = 19.3%). Subgroup and sensitivity analysis yielded similar result (Fig. 6). In subgroup and sensitivity analysis, the results showed basically consistent with the overall analysis (Table 4). When we stratified the analysis by geographic region, the pooled RR was 0.96 (95%CI: 0.84–1.10) for 5 studies conducted in North America, 0.98 (95%CI: 0.66–1.45) for 1 studies conducted in Europe. Stratifying by study design, the combined RR was 1.06 (95%CI: 0.84–1.33) among case-control studies and 0.88 (95%CI: 0.75–1.04) among cohort studies, respectively. Compared with a low NOS score (SMR = 2.08, 95%CI: 0.73–5.91), the association was significant among studies with high NOS score (OR = 1.51, 95%CI: 1.14–1.98). In subgroup analysis adjusted for risk factors, including age, race, smoking and alcohol drinking, the results was consistent with overall analysis. In a sensitivity analysis, similar results were observed, which ranged from 0.93 (95%CI: 0.86–1.00) with low heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.612, I2 = 0.0%) (excluding the study by Mill et al.11) to 0.99 (95%CI: 0.82–1.19) with significant heterogeneity (Pfor heterogeneity = 0.194, I2 = 34.1%) (excluding the study by Turner et al.16). The Begg rank correlation test (P = 0.133) and Egger linear regression test (P = 0.489) also indicated no evidence of publication bias. Because number of included studies less than 10, we did not perform the funnel plot.
Figure 6

Forest plot of any allergy and relative risk of prostate cancer.

Discussion

Allergic diseases (immune mediated conditions), encompassing hay fever, allergic asthma and atopy, are caused by inappropriate immunological response to antigens that do not elicit response in most individuals. Allergy-related carcinogenesis is a topic of interest but has generated considerable controversy. There has been a long-standing interest in determining whether individuals with allergic diseases have an altered risk of developing cancer. Several studies investigated the association between allergic diseases and specific cancers. Asthma, hay fever, and atopy have been associated with the risk of several specific cancers, such as pancreatic cancer, lymphomas, brain tumors, breast cancer and leukemia, although inconsistently1014154647. Allergic diseases could theoretically both prevent and induce the development of several specific cancers. Two hypotheses that attempt to explain the possible mechanism between allergic diseases and cancer are immune surveillance and the antigenic stimulation theory48. Allergy might enhance the human immune system to recognize and eliminate cancer cells. In contrast, the antigenic stimulation hypothesis proposes that hyperactive immune conditions trigger chronic cellular inflammation, resulting in DNA mutation in dividing cells and inevitably leading to cancer development49. The determination of whether asthma, hay fever, atopy and any allergy are associated with prostate cancer has been evaluated in a small number of studies. The small number of prior studies evaluating allergic disease and prostate cancer has not produced consistent results, inverse121618, null1314151728293031, and positive associations10111921222324252627 have been reported. The inconsistent results of previous studies may be due to insufficient study sample size, publication bias, selection bias, lack of adjustment for confounding factors, and the use of different definitions of allergic diseases. A recent meta-analysis of the few studies suggested that asthma (N = 8, pooled RR: 0.93; 95%CI: 0.76–1.15), hay fever (N = 5, pooled RR: 0.96; 95%CI: 0.87–1.05), and any allergy (N = 4, pooled RR: 1.01; 95%CI: 0.87–1.17), but not for atopy (N = 3, pooled RR: 1.43; 95%CI: 1.08–1.91)20. However, studies published subsequent to this report have reported inconsistent results232425262728293031. In addition, the relation between allergic diseases and cancer risk remain unclear, and appear to be site-specific, we conducted an up-dated meta-analysis to summarize the current proof to evaluate the association between allergic conditions and prostate cancer risk. The meta-analysis suggested that there is little observational support for the two theories in the development of prostate cancer. The effect of hyperreactive state and/or immune surveillance theories maybe mutually offset in the body. The present meta-analysis exhibited several strengths, compared to the previous published meta-analysis. The first research highlight of this meta-analysis is its large sample size. The large number of total cases provided high statistical power to quantitatively evaluate the association between allergic conditions and prostate cancer risk. In addition, we expand the meta-analysis and the association between different geographic regions and study design, adjusted for covariates was also explored. Second, publication bias is a potential concern in any meta-analysis because small studies with null results do not get published. However, in our meta-analysis, we found little evidence of publication bias. Nevertheless, there are some several limitations in the present meta-analysis. First, case-control studies have intrinsic limitations, such as selective bias and recall or memory bias. This limitation can partly explained the different results between case-control and cohort studies in the stratified analysis. Second, we cannot exclude the possibility that the observed null relationship between allergic disorders and prostate cancer risk is attributed to confounding factors. Majority of the studies were adjusted for potential confounding factors, but not all potential confounders were adjusted in every study. Although the allergic conditions and prostate cancer share common some potential confounders, such as cigarette smoking, alcohol drinking, old age, BMI and race, in analysis stratified by adjusting the smoking status, age, alcohol drinking BMI and race, similar results were obtained. Third, measurement error in assessment of allergic conditions are known to bias effect estimates, however, none of included studies in the meta-analysis made any corrections for measurement errors. An accurate assessment of allergic conditions remains a challenge, because these measures are based on different assessment methods, such as allergen-specific IgE measurement, skin prick testing, self-reported questionnaire, interviewed by medical staff, and hospital discharge register. Diagnosis of allergic conditions was largely based on a self-reported. Only a few studied were based on measurements that may be condisered to be more objective: serum LgE or skin prick tests. The increasing errors in measurements become inevitable. The imprecise measurement of allergic disorders might have attenuated the true associations. Fourth, potential sources of between-study heterogeneity, which is common in meta-analysis, should be explored although the low heterogeneity was found between hay fever or atopy and prostate cancer risk. Results from subgroup and sensitivity analysis indicated that geographic region, study design, quality of NOS may be potential sources of heterogeneity. Thirds, in subgroup analysis, there was a marginally positive association between hay fever and prostate cancer risk in studies that adjusted for age and alcohol drinking and conducted in the Europe, but a null association among studies adjusted for cigarette smoking and race. Due to the numerous comparisons and few included studies, this positive finding may have been a chance finding. It indicated that more relevant articles are needed to further explore this association. Fifth, analysis of the length of the induction period allows for characterising an exposure–outcome relationship and for falsifying the pathway assumed. The longer the supposed time sequence between the exposure and the occurrence of the outcome, the more crucial to analyze the empirical induction period. The average follow-up ranged from 5.05 years to 43 years among included cohort studies. Patients were followed up over five years in majority of the studies (92.8%). Therefore, the observation period in the included cohort studies covered a reasonable induction period. Overall, these limitations may affect our final conclusions. In the meta-analysis, we found no indication of an association between allergic conditions (asthma, atopy, hay fever, or any allergy) and risk of prostate cancer, and there is little observational support for the immune surveillace theory or antigenic stimulation theory in the development of prostate cancer risk. However, these results should be carefully interpreted because of the significant heterogeneity among studies and potential confounders. Additional large-scale and high-quality prospective studies are needed to confirm the association between allergic conditions and risk of prostate cancer.

Methods

A literature search was performed in March 15, 2016 without restriction to regions, publication types, or languages. The primary sources were the electronic databases of Pubmed and Embase databases. To identify eligible studies, the main search employed various combinations of Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) and non-MeSH terms “prostate carcinoma” OR “prostatic cancer” OR “prostate cancer” OR “prostatic carcinoma” combined with “asthma” OR “asthma*” OR “allergy” OR “allerg*” OR “atopy”. The main search was completed independently by two investigators. Any discrepancy was solved by consultation of an investigator, not involved in the initial procedure. Moreover, the reference lists of all the studies and published systematic reviews, meta-analysis were also screened to identify other potentially eligible studies.

Study selection

To minimize the differences between studies, we imposed the following methodological restrictions for the inclusion criteria: 1) study design of interest was either cohort or case control study 2) the exposure of interest was allergic conditions (asthma, atopy, hay fever and “any allergy”); 3) the outcome was prostate cancer; 4) the study reported enough information to extract effect estimates and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals. In case of multiple publications, only the most recent or comprehensive one was considered eligible. Two authors (JKS and XHY) independently evaluated the eligibility of all retrieved studies and disagreements were resolved through discussion or consultation with a third author (LHG).

Data extraction

Data from the included studies were extracted and summarized independently by two of the authors using a pre-standardized data extraction form. Any disagreement was resolved by the senior author (ZWD). The following data were extracted from each study: first author, publication year, study design, country, sex, total number of cases and subjects for cohort studies, total number of cases and controls for case-control studies, assessment methods for allergic diseases, quantitative effect estimates (expressed as an odds ratio, hazard risk, relative risk, standardized mortality ratio, or standardized incidence ration) and 95%CI and variables adjusted for in the meta-analysis. The OR in one study18 was not extracted, thus, we computed the crude risk estimates and corresponding CI. Two review authors (SJK and ZJG) independently extracted data from the selected studies. Any disagreements were resolved through discussion and consensus.

Quality assessment

Two review authors (SJK and ZJG) independently assessed the risk of bias using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS), which consists of three factors: patient selection, comparability of the study groups, and assessment of outcome. A score of 0–9 (allocated as stars) was allocated to each study5051. The studies achieving six or more stars were considered to be of high quality.

Statistical analysis

Because the incidence of prostate cancer risk was low, the OR/HR was considered as approximation of RR, SMR was also considered as equivalent of SIR52. We computed the combined RR and SIR and corresponding 95%CI from the estimated reported in each study. The aggregated results and 95%CIs for effect sizes were calculated using inverse-variance weighted random-effects meta-analysis, which incorporated both within-study and between-study variability53. I2 was used to assess heterogeneity across studies, with I2 values of 0%, 25%, 50% and 75% representing no, low, moderate and high heterogeneity, respectively. Subgroup analysis was stratified by geographic region, study design, quality of NOS scale, body mass index (BMI) and whether the study adjusted for risk factors, including age, race, alcohol drinking and smoking. The sensitivity analysis was also conducted by removing one study at a time and the rest analyzed to determine whether an individual study affected the aggregate result or not. Small study bias, consistent with publication bias, was evaluated by statistical tests (Begg rank correlation test54 and Egger’s linear regression test55), the visual examination of funnel plot when the number of included studies ≥10, and the results were considered to indicate publication bias when P < 0.10. All statistical analyses were conducted using Stata version 13.1 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX, USA).

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Zhu, J. et al. Association between allergic conditions and risk of prostate cancer: A Prisma-Compliant Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Sci. Rep. 6, 35682; doi: 10.1038/srep35682 (2016).
  54 in total

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Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 16.671

7.  Chronic inflammation in benign prostate tissue is associated with high-grade prostate cancer in the placebo arm of the prostate cancer prevention trial.

Authors:  Bora Gurel; M Scott Lucia; Ian M Thompson; Phyllis J Goodman; Catherine M Tangen; Alan R Kristal; Howard L Parnes; Ashraful Hoque; Scott M Lippman; Siobhan Sutcliffe; Sarah B Peskoe; Charles G Drake; William G Nelson; Angelo M De Marzo; Elizabeth A Platz
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev       Date:  2014-04-18       Impact factor: 4.254

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Authors:  E Vesterinen; E Pukkala; T Timonen; A Aromaa
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 7.196

9.  Objective allergy markers and risk of cancer mortality and hospitalization in a large population-based cohort.

Authors:  Niloofar Taghizadeh; Judith M Vonk; Jeannette J Hospers; Dirkje S Postma; Elisabeth G E de Vries; Jan P Schouten; H Marike Boezen
Journal:  Cancer Causes Control       Date:  2014-11-12       Impact factor: 2.506

10.  Asthma and Risk of Prostate Cancer: A Population-Based Case-Cohort Study in Taiwan.

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Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2015-09       Impact factor: 1.817

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