Diet
can provide protection against development of certain cancers, new
studies show
Newswise — With cancer, researchers don’t believe “you are what you
eat” - that disease is always a direct result of what is, or what
isn’t, on your dinner plate. But studies into the association
between diet and cancer show that food can have an impact in
preventing cancer, or in reducing the aggressiveness of the disease.
At the American Association for Cancer Research’s Frontiers in
Cancer Prevention Research meeting, investigators have found that
eating fish regularly as an adult, or soy as a young girl, or using
a specific vitamin if you are a smoker, can help to protect against
development of certain cancers.
Another study found that blood cholesterol, some of which
comes from eating animal fats, doesn’t control whether a man
develops prostate cancer, but lower levels of these lipids
may help protect against aggressive forms of the disease.
The researchers say these studies provide some of the
strongest links found to date between diet and cancer.
Childhood soy intake and breast cancer risk in Asian-American women
In a novel study of Asian-American women, a team of researchers led
by National Cancer Institute (NCI) investigators has found that
consuming soy during childhood, adolescence and adult life were each
associated with a decreased risk of breast cancer, but that the
strongest and most consistent effect was seen for childhood intake.
They found that women who ate the most soy-based foods (such as
tofu, miso, natto) during ages 5-11 reduced their risk of developing
breast cancer by 58 percent, compared to women who ate the least
amount. The corresponding reductions for adolescent and adult intake
were about 25 percent.
“Childhood soy intake was significantly associated with reduced
breast cancer risk in our study, suggesting that the timing of soy
intake may be especially critical,” said the study’s lead
investigator, Larissa Korde, M.D., MPH, a staff clinician at the
NCI’s Clinical Genetics Branch, in the Division of Cancer
Epidemiology and Prevention. Korde worked in collaboration with
epidemiologists at the University of Hawaii, the Northern California
Cancer Center, and the University of Southern California.
The underlying mechanism is not known. However, Korde said that one
hypothesis for the decreased risk associated with childhood intake
is that soy isoflavones have estrogenic effects that cause changes
in breast tissue, leading to decreased sensitivity to carcinogens. A
similar protective effect has been found in studies of overweight
girls, perhaps because fat tissue also secretes estrogens, she
added.
“Hormonal exposures in adulthood, such as use of estrogen and
progesterone replacement therapy, are established breast cancer risk
factors. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that
hormonally related exposures early in life may also modify
susceptibility to breast cancer,” Korde said.
Studies investigating adult soy intake and breast cancer risk have
had mixed results, but the two studies that looked at adolescent
consumption found that the risks of developing breast cancer later
in life were cut in half. This study is the first to address the
relationship between soy consumption during childhood and future
risk of breast cancer.
As provocative as the findings are, the senior investigator on the
study, Regina Ziegler, Ph.D, MPH, cautioned that it would be
premature to recommend changes in childhood diet. “This is the first
study to evaluate childhood soy intake and subsequent breast cancer
risk, and this one result is not enough for a public health
recommendation,” she said. “The findings need to be replicated
through additional research.”
The researchers conducted a case-control study of women of Chinese,
Japanese and Filipino descent who were living in the San Francisco
Bay area, Los Angeles, or Oahu, Hawaii. Included were 597
Asian-American women with breast cancer and 966 women without the
disease, who answered questions about their adult and adolescent
diet and lifestyle. In addition, for a subset of 255 participants
whose mothers were alive and living in the US, the mothers were
asked about their daughter’s early childhood exposures.
Soy intake was then divided into thirds, based on frequency of
consumption, and by comparing the highest category to the lowest,
the researchers found an inverse association between the risk of
developing breast cancer and the amount of soy consumed. The
childhood relationship held in all three races and all three study
sites, and in women with and without a family history of breast
cancer. Since the effects of childhood soy could not be explained by
other measures of Asian lifestyle during childhood or adult life,
researchers concluded that early soy intake might itself be
protective.
A prospective study of fish, n-3 fatty acid intake, and colorectal
cancer risk in men
Men who ate fish five times a week or more had a 40 percent lower
risk of developing colorectal cancer compared to men who ate fish
less than once a week, according to a new analysis of data from
22,071 participants in the Physicians’ Health Study (PHS).
The researchers say the reduction in colorectal cancer risk is
substantial in comparison to other dietary components, and while
they don’t suggest that everyone starts eating fish daily simply
because of these results, they say the health benefits of fish
consumption have already been proven.
“We already know that eating fish can reduce the risk of sudden
cardiac death, and this might provide another reason to add fish to
your diet,” said Megan Phillips, a doctoral student at the Harvard
School of Public Health and the lead author of this study.
The researchers believe the health effects of fish consumption in
relation to colorectal cancer may lie in their content of the n-3
fatty acids that can inhibit the cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme.
This enzyme acts as a mediator of inflammatory responses thought to
be associated with cancer development.
The PHS was designed as a randomized, double blind,
placebo-controlled clinical trial to examine the effect of aspirin
and beta-carotene supplements on development of cancer and
cardiovascular disease, and the participants filled out a one-time
food questionnaire 12 months after starting the study. In this
analysis, investigators were also trying to determine if fish
consumption had a different effect on men who received aspirin for
five years compared to men who weren’t randomized to use aspirin,
which is also a COX-2 inhibitor. “We thought that maybe for men who
received aspirin, it wouldn’t matter whether they ate fish or not,”
Phillips said.
The researchers looked at four different categories of fish consumed
- tuna fish, dark meat fish (salmon, sardines, bluefish, etc.), a
general fish category, and shellfish including shrimp, lobster and
scallops - and asked how many times the participants ate them on
average during the previous year.
They found almost 10 percent ate fish less than once a week, 31
percent ate it less than two times a week, 48 percent ate fish less
than five times a week, and about 11 percent ate it five times or
more a week. They then compared these figures with incidence of
colorectal cancer that later developed in the men. (The average
follow-up was 19.4 years).
They found that compared to men who ate the least amount of fish,
the risk of developing colorectal cancer was 40 percent lower in men
who ate the most fish, was 20 percent lower in men who ate fish 2-5
times a week, and 13 percent lower among participants who ate fish
less than two times a week.
The relationship between fish consumption and colorectal cancer was
similar for men randomized to aspirin and those who weren’t,
possibly because the researchers only had information on aspirin use
during the first five years in the trial, and “it may take more
years of aspirin use to see an effect,” Phillips said.
While she said the results are promising, Phillips also noted that
they are based on the assumptions that the pattern of fish
consumption observed in the sole food questionnaire represented a
diet that the men subsequently followed for many years.
In addition, men who consumed more fish may also have a healthier
lifestyle perhaps including better cancer screening. Although this
study controlled for some of these factors such as cigarette
smoking, vigorous exercise, and multivitamin use, the investigators
do not have information on colorectal endoscopies. Thus, these
findings need additional confirmation through other prospective
studies with more complete information and a definitive answer might
require a randomized trial, said senior author Jing Ma, M.D., Ph.D.,
a researcher at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital-based Channing
Laboratory and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical
School.
The relationship between dietary antioxidants and oxidative damage
in smokers: evidence of effect modification by lifestyle and genetic
factors
Vitamin E in the diet of male smokers appears to protect against
oxidative damage that can lead to cancer development, according to
researchers from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public
Health working with investigators from the NYU School of Medicine.
They found that male smokers who had high plasma levels of vitamin E
had lower levels of oxidative-DNA damage in their white blood cells.
Oxidative DNA damage is a mechanism by which tobacco smoking can
increase risk of cancer. In addition, the protective effect of
vitamin E was greatest among the men with a beneficial form of a
common “detoxifying” gene, GSTM1. The investigators did not find a
similar effect of vitamin E in women.
“There was a dose-response relationship, in that the more vitamin E
we found in the blood of the men, the less there was of this
cancer-related biomarker,” said the study’s senior investigator,
Frederica P. Perera, Dr.P.H., Professor in the Division of
Environmental Health Sciences at the Columbia University School of
Public Health.
“This suggests that while working toward the goal of quitting
smoking, which is the very best way to prevent development of
smoking-related cancers, it could be helpful to eat a diet rich in
vitamin E,” she said, and added, “we don’t yet know why this
relationship was not found in women, but a good diet is beneficial
to health in many ways.”
The most active form of vitamin E (known as ?-tocopherol) is
believed to be a strong antioxidant, capable of preventing oxidative
chemical reactions that damage DNA. The vitamin is found in certain
vegetable oils, nuts, whole grains, fish, green leafy vegetables and
other foods. Studies that have examined the ability of vitamin E to
protect against cancer have shown mixed results, however.
The present study is unusual, the researchers say, because it
measured two different markers in white blood cells drawn from 280
participants - people who smoked at least 10 cigarettes a day. These
markers were the amount of vitamin E in blood derived from food
(those who used vitamins were excluded from this study) and the
quantity of 8-hydroxy-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), a measure of
oxidative damage to DNA.
The researchers found a protective effect of plasma ?-tocopherol on
oxidative damage among smokers, but only among men. They next looked
at the interaction between vitamin E and GSTM1, a gene variant known
to produce enzymes that efficiently detoxify carcinogens in tobacco
smoke, and found a greater effect of the vitamin among men with this
gene.
“We all want to know if vitamins help protect us against disease,
and measuring their effects in the blood using markers of cellular
damage is the most direct way to do that,” said Perera. “But we have
a lot of work ahead before we can fully understand the role of
antioxidants in the chemoprevention of tobacco-related cancer.”
Association between plasma cholesterol and prostate cancer
Prostate cancer patients who had lower levels of cholesterol in
their blood had a significantly reduced chance of developing more
aggressive forms of the disease, compared to patients with higher
cholesterol readings.
These findings may help explain the earlier discovery, reported by
the same team of researchers at the AACR annual meeting in 2005,
that men who used statin drugs experienced half the risk of
developing advanced prostate cancer.
“Statin drugs reduce cholesterol in the blood, but they also
influence a number of different pathways,” said the study’s lead
researcher, Elizabeth Platz, ScD, MPH, an associate professor in the
Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health. “This study suggests that the ability of statins to
lower cholesterol may be important to prostate carcinogenesis, but
we are continuing to examine other pathways with which statin drugs
interact, such as reduction of inflammation.”
The researchers looked at cholesterol levels first because
cholesterol affects cell signaling and survival. Some scientists
theorize that a large quantity of cholesterol in the blood could
stimulate the survival of abnormal prostate cells.
They studied blood drawn from 698 men before they were diagnosed
with prostate cancer and matched it to blood taken from 698 men who
had not been diagnosed with the disease. All of the men participated
in Harvard University’s Health Professionals Follow-up Study, a
group of 18,018 participants who provided a blood sample between
1993 and 1995.
They found that mean cholesterol levels did not differ between the
men with prostate cancer and the control participants, suggesting
that cholesterol was not involved in the initial development of
prostate cancer, Platz said.
But when comparing men who had the lowest quartile of serum
cholesterol to men who had the highest, they found that prostate
cancer patients with lower cholesterol had the lowest risk of
developing a more worrisome form of the disease. They specifically
found that the risk of being diagnosed with high-grade or advanced
cancer was reduced by 40 percent and 50 percent, respectively.
Platz says it is not clear at what levels serum cholesterol may
stimulate the abnormal growth seen in cancer development. “The
findings suggest either that high cholesterol may push existing
prostate cancer to become aggressive, or, alternatively, very low
levels of cholesterol may provide protection against development of
an aggressive cancer,” she said. “We just don’t know which it is at
this point.”
She also said that because the findings come from an observational
study, not a trial, it is impossible to conclude that men can lower
their risk of developing an aggressive form of prostate cancer by
reducing their intake of saturated fat, the type of fat that
increases serum cholesterol, which some studies have linked to an
increased risk of advanced prostate cancer.
“It is too soon to say that such measures would be specifically
beneficial to lowering such a risk, but for good health in general,
it is prudent to consume a diet that contains healthful fats that do
not increase serum cholesterol,” she said.
The mission of the American Association for Cancer Research is to
prevent and cure cancer. Founded in 1907, AACR is the world’s oldest
and largest professional organization dedicated to advancing cancer
research.
The membership includes more than 24,000 basic, translational, and
clinical researchers; health care professionals; and cancer
survivors and advocates in the United States and more than 70 other
countries. AACR marshals the full spectrum of expertise from the
cancer community to accelerate progress in the prevention, diagnosis
and treatment of cancer through high-quality scientific and
educational programs.
It funds innovative, meritorious research grants. The AACR Annual
Meeting attracts over 17,000 participants who share the latest
discoveries and developments in the field. Special Conferences
throughout the year present novel data across a wide variety of
topics in cancer research, diagnosis and treatment. AACR publishes
five major peer-reviewed journals: Cancer Research;
Clinical Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer Therapeutics;
Molecular Cancer Research; and Cancer Epidemiology,
Biomarkers & Prevention.
Its most recent publication, CR, is a magazine for cancer
survivors, patient advocates, their families, physicians, and
scientists. It provides a forum for sharing essential,
evidence-based information and perspectives on progress in cancer
research, survivorship and advocacy.