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Sexual factors and prostate cancer

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-12, 06:12 authored by GG Giles, G Severi, DR English, MRE Mccredie, Ron BorlandRon Borland, P Boyle, JL Hopper
OBJECTIVETo assess whether prostate cancer might be related to hormone levels and, by inference, to differences in sexual activity.PATIENTS, SUBJECTS AND METHODSIn a case‐control study of men with prostate cancer aged < 70 years at diagnosis and age‐matched control subjects, information was collected on two aspects of sexual activity; the number of sexual partners and the frequency of total ejaculations during the third to fifth decades of life.RESULTSThere was no association of prostate cancer with the number of sexual partners or with the maximum number of ejaculations in 24 h. There was a negative trend (P < 0.01) for the association between risk and number of ejaculations in the third decade, independent of those in the fourth or fifth. Men who averaged five or more ejaculations weekly in their 20s had an odds ratio (95% confidence interval) of 0.66 (0.49–0.87) compared with those who ejaculated less often.CONCLUSIONSThe null association with the number of sexual partners argues against infection as a cause of prostate cancer in this population. Ejaculatory frequency, especially in early adult life, is negatively associated with the risk of prostate cancer, and thus the molecular biological consequences of suppressed or diminished ejaculation are worthy of further research.

History

Journal

BJU International

Volume

92

Pagination

211-216

Location

England

ISSN

1464-4096

eISSN

1464-410X

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Wiley

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