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Could Viagra, Cialis help boost colon cancer survival?

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  • ED medication may reduce the risk of death in men who suffer from colorectal cancer 
  • The reason why the drugs have an anti-tumour effect isn't yet clear
  • However, according to an expert, they are known to block a protein that may play a role in cancer development


Erectile dysfunction (ED) drugs such as Viagra, Cialis and Levitra may do more than restore sexual function – they may also prolong the lives of men with colon cancer.

That's the conclusion of a new Swedish study, which reported that the risk of premature death dropped by as much as 18% among colon cancer patients who used ED drugs.

The medications were also linked to a 15% reduction in risk for the key cause of death from colon cancer – that is, cancer that has spread.

"This is the first population-based study to explore the effect of these drugs on the death risk in men with colorectal cancer," said lead author Wuqing Huang, a doctoral candidate at Lund University in Sweden.

Cancer-fighting potential

She and her colleagues focused on so-called "PDE5 inhibitors" – drugs that address impotence by regulating penile blood flow.

"There are two reasons why we considered the anti-cancer possibility of these drugs," Huang said.

Prior studies suggested that ED drugs can inhibit tumour growth in mice and the activity of a gene called PDE5A. Huang said past work suggested colon cancer patients with lower PDE5A activity levels may live "significantly longer" than others.

To get a better handle on the cancer-fighting potential of the drugs, the researchers used a nationwide database to identify men in Sweden who were diagnosed with colon cancer between 2005 and 2014.

After excluding patients with late-stage cancer, researchers focused on more than 11 300 cancer patients who were not taking an ED drug and about 1 100 patients who were. (No one was instructed to use the drugs if they weren't already doing so.)

Over more than four years of follow-up, about 10% of those who used an ED drug died, compared to 17.5% of patients who did not. The risk was even lower for those in the ED group who also had cancer surgery.

An observational study

Huang said the explanation for the drugs' anti-tumour effect isn't yet clear. It could have to do with the beneficial impact EDs have on immune function, reduced cell death and chemotherapy sensitivity, she said.

But until researchers can get a better understanding, "it is not suggested for colon cancer patients to get ED medications to control their cancer at this moment," Huang said.

"The current evidence is not enough to provide recommendations, as our study is an observational study," she stressed. "Clinical trials are necessary to confirm it."

Still, Dr Andrew Chan, a professor at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who reviewed the study, said the findings were intriguing.

"The work extends a prior study from this group showing that these medications may reduce the risk of developing colorectal cancer," he noted. "It is also biologically plausible that these medications may have an anti-cancer effect, since they are known to block a specific protein that may play a role in cancer development."

The findings were recently published in the journal Nature Communications.

Image credit: iStock

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