Association of type 2 diabetes with cancer: A meta-analysis with bias analysis for unmeasured confounding in 151 cohorts comprising 32 million people
journal contribution
posted on 2020-06-03, 09:55authored byS Ling, K Brown, J Miksza, L Howells, A Morrison, E Issa, T Yates, K Khunti, M Davies, F Zaccardi
Background: Whether the association between type 2 diabetes (T2D) and cancer is causal
remains controversial.
Purpose: To assess how robust are the observational associations between (T2D) and cancer
to unmeasured confounding.
Data sources: PubMed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane library were systematically
searched on January 10th, 2019.
Study selection: Observational studies investigating associations between T2D and cancer
incidence or mortality.
Data extraction: Cohort-level relative risk (RR).
Data Synthesis: RRs were combined in random-effects meta-analyses and pooled estimates
used in bias analyses. A total of 151 cohorts (over 32 million people, 1.1 million cancer cases
and 150,000 cancer deaths) were included. In meta-analyses, T2D was associated with
incidence of several cancers, from prostate (RR 0.83; 95% CI: 0.79, 0.88) to liver (2.23; 1.99,
2.49); and mortality of pancreatic cancer (1.67; 1.30, 2.14). In bias analyses, assuming an
unmeasured confounding associated with both T2D and cancer with a RR of 1.5, the proportion
of studies with a true effect size larger than a RR of 1.1 (i.e., 10% increased risk in individuals
with T2D) was nearly 100% for liver, pancreatic, and endometrial; 86% for gallbladder; 67%
for kidney; 64% for colon; 62% for colorectal; and less than 50% for other cancer incidence,
and 92% for pancreatic cancer mortality.
Limitations: Biases other than unmeasured confounding were not analytically assessed.
Conclusions: Our findings strongly suggest a causal association between T2D and liver,
pancreatic, and endometrial cancer incidence, and pancreatic cancer mortality; conversely,
associations with other cancers were less robust to unmeasured confounding.
Funding
The Leicester Real World Evidence Unit is funded by University of Leicester, NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands, and Leicester Biomedical Research Centre. This project was supported by the Leicester Institute of Advanced Studies (Tiger team).