babyÖ±²¥app

Skip to main content

There’s a reason it’s called ‘graveyard’

There’s a reason it’s called ‘graveyard’

Top image: Pixaby

In a study she conducted while she was a CU Boulder postdoctoral researcher, Elizabeth Holzhausen and colleagues find a link between night-shift work and prostate-cancer risk


More workers than ever before can take advantage of flexible schedules. But some in health care, emergency services, manufacturing and other occupations are often constrained to regular overnight shifts. Epidemiologist Elizabeth Holzhausen had questions about the serious health risks associated with night shift work, specifically regarding prostate cancer.

Holzhausen, who worked as a postdoctoral associate in the University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder Department of Integrative Physiology before recently becoming an assistant research professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, is coauthor—along with Jinyoung Moon of the College of Natural Sciences, Seoul National University, and Yongseok Mun of the Hallym University Kangnam Sacred Heart Hospital in Seoul—of in men who regularly work the night shift.

 

Headshot of Elizabeth Holzhausen

While a postdoctoral associate in the CU Boulder Department of Integrative Physiology, Elizabeth Holzhausen studied the prevalence of prostate cancer in men who work the night shift.

They also examined whether the number of years on that shift increased the risk to employees. Their paper was recently published in the journal Heliyon.

For the study, Holzhausen and her colleagues conducted a meta-analysis, examining a large number of studies that looked at prostate cancer incidence and its possible relationship to night-shift work. One motivation for the meta-analysis was that there had been mixed results regarding any correlation between prostate cancer and night-shift workers in past studies. Holzhausen and the research team hoped to settle the matter with a rigorous meta-analysis.

Previous research has shown that working the night shift can present numerous health hazards. Along with heightened cancer risk, night shifts can increase the probability of heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and sleep disorders in workers.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, 13% of men will get prostate cancer, and approximately 3% of men die from the disease, which is more likely to strike older men. Definitive current figures are difficult to find, but the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that in 2018, close to 4% of employees worked the night shift, including approximately 2.5 million men.

Prostate cancer and the night shift

In their study, Holzhausen and her co-authors found that there was a link between increased incidence of prostate cancer and night-shift work. They also determined that the longer men worked the night shift, the higher the risk became. The study showed that workers on the night shift for just one year had a 1% increase in prostate cancer risk, but for workers who had 30 years of overnight shifts, that risk jumped to 39%.

“I was surprised about the magnitude of the findings,†says Holzhausen. “There are a lot of people who work the night shift, so this is especially impacting people who work this shift over a long period of time.â€

As Holzhausen explains, the disruptions to the body from shift work are significant: “There are several cancers that have been associated with night-shift work, and one of the big things is that we know lack of sleep and circadian misalignment can reduce the functioning of the immune system,†she says. “As a result, [the body’s] surveillance for cancer cells could be impacted if someone is doing chronic night-shift work.â€

One of the challenges of the study was controlling for outside factors across a number of different studies that used different methods. A large chunk of the paper describes how the researchers achieved that.

"There are several cancers that have been associated with night-shift work, and one of the big things is that we know lack of sleep and circadian misalignment can reduce the functioning of the immune system."

“We were very rigorous about what studies we included," says Holzhausen. "Studies where the exposure was maybe nursing or some occupation that could be night-shift work, but they didn't explicitly identify if they were doing night-shift work, were excluded. We only looked at studies where specifically night-shift work was the exposure.â€

The researchers also included studies that controlled for sociobabyÖ±²¥app status to remove it as a variable in the study. "Nearly all of the studies included in our meta-analysis considered sociobabyÖ±²¥app status. We did not analyze sociobabyÖ±²¥app status explicitly and aren’t able to make inferences about different sociobabyÖ±²¥app strata," says Holzhausen.

"However, the aim in adjusting for sociobabyÖ±²¥app status is to estimate the impact of night-shift work on risk of prostate cancer independent of sociobabyÖ±²¥app status. In other words, the results we observed are unlikely to be due to differences in sociobabyÖ±²¥app status between day- and night-shift workers."

Holzhausen says that since night-shift work is probably not going away anytime soon, night-shift workers should be proactive in mitigating the potential risks: “Get additional screenings for prostate cancer, and take other measures that we know can help prevent prostate cancer, like eating a healthy diet, maintaining a healthy weight, limiting alcohol and not smoking.â€


Did you enjoy this article?  Passionate about integrative physiology? Show your support.