Abstract

We examined the risk of prostate cancer in the Korean population stratified on the basis of age group and risk based on metabolic diseases, using National Health Insurance System (NHIS) data. Of the 51,827,813 people from the NHIS data in 2015, 10,879,591 men without prostate cancer who underwent a health examination were analyzed. The risk of prostate cancer was analyzed with stratification by age. Multivariate‐adjusted Cox regression analysis was conducted to examine the association between prostate cancer and metabolic diseases by age groups. The risk of prostate cancer increased continuously with age and 59 years may be a point of inflection. The hazard ratio (HR) of prostate cancer development rose sharply as that age point passed. The population with metabolic diseases was more likely to develop prostate cancer than the population without any of these components. In addition, the incidence rate ratio (IRR) decreased from the youngest age group to the age group comprising 55–59 year olds. Beyond this age group, there was a plateau. The relative risk for prostate cancer associated with metabolic diseases also showed divergent associations with age. The risk of prostate cancer increased continuously with age and the peak Youden index was at 59 years. The relative risk for prostate cancer according to metabolic diseases also showed divergent associations beyond 59 years of age. Therefore, setting the age threshold at 59 years would improve the present clinical risk stratification for prostate cancer in Korea.

Highlights

  • Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in men worldwide

  • There has been no retrospective, large, national cross-­ sectional study involving population samples stratified by Effects of Age and Metabolic Diseases age groups; in this study, we examined the risk of prostate cancer in the Korean population stratified by age group and the presence of metabolic diseases using the National Health Insurance System (NHIS) data

  • The diagnosed age of prostate cancer mainly distributed in older age groups

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in men worldwide. It is less common in the Asia–Pacific region than in the Western Hemisphere, the incidence has increased continuously [1]. The biological mechanisms linking Westernization and increased prostate cancer are still unclear, age, ethnicity, and family history are demonstrated risk factors [2, 3]. Prostate cancer incidence rates increase with age in the Asia–Pacific region. Multiple epidemiologic studies have suggested that metabolic diseases are associated with cancer including breast, endometrial, ovarian, colorectal, and liver cancer [4, 5]. Prostate cancer as well may be linked to metabolic disease. The results of individual studies have been inconsistent, and some even reported a negative association of metabolic disease on prostate cancer [6, 7]

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