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Low-Carbohydrate, High-Protein Diets may
reduce both Tumor Growth Rates and Cancer
Risk
Newswise, June 21, 2011--Eating a
low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet may
reduce the risk of cancer and slow the
growth of tumors already present, according
to a study published in Cancer Research,
a journal of the American Association for
Cancer Research.
The study was conducted in mice, but the
scientists involved agree that the strong
biological findings are definitive enough
that an effect in humans can be considered.
“This shows that something as simple as a
change in diet can have an impact on cancer
risk,” said lead researcher Gerald Krystal,
Ph.D., a distinguished scientist at the
British Columbia Cancer Research Centre.
Cancer Research editor-in-chief
George Prendergast, Ph.D., CEO of the
Lankenau Institute for Medical Research,
agreed. “Many cancer patients are interested
in making changes in areas that they can
control, and this study definitely lends
credence to the idea that a change in diet
can be beneficial,” said Prendergast, who
was not involved with the study.
Krystal and his colleagues implanted various
strains of mice with human tumor cells or
with mouse tumor cells and assigned them to
one of two diets.
The first diet, a typical Western diet,
contained about 55 percent carbohydrate, 23
percent protein and 22 percent fat. The
second, which is somewhat like a South Beach
diet but higher in protein, contained 15
percent carbohydrate, 58 percent protein and
26 percent fat.
They found that the tumor cells grew
consistently slower on the second diet.
As well, mice genetically predisposed to
breast cancer were put on these two diets
and almost half of them on the Western diet
developed breast cancer within their first
year of life while none on the
low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet did.
Interestingly, only one on the Western diet
reached a normal life span (approximately 2
years), with 70 percent of them dying from
cancer while only 30 percent of those on the
low-carbohydrate diet developed cancer and
more than half these mice reached or
exceeded their normal life span.
Krystal and colleagues also tested the
effect of an mTOR inhibitor, which inhibits
cell growth, and a COX-2 inhibitor, which
reduces inflammation, on tumor development,
and found these agents had an additive
effect in the mice fed the low-carbohydrate,
high-protein diet.
When asked to speculate on the biological
mechanism, Krystal said that tumor cells,
unlike normal cells, need significantly more
glucose to grow and thrive. Restricting
carbohydrate intake can significantly limit
blood glucose and insulin, a hormone that
has been shown in many independent studies
to promote tumor growth in both humans and
mice.
Furthermore, a low-carbohydrate,
high-protein diet has the potential to both
boost the ability of the immune system to
kill cancer cells and prevent obesity, which
leads to chronic inflammation and cancer.
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The mission of the American Association for
Cancer Research is to prevent and cure
cancer. Founded in 1907, the AACR is the
world’s oldest and largest professional
organization dedicated to advancing cancer
research. The membership includes 33,000
basic, translational and clinical
researchers; health care professionals; and
cancer survivors and advocates in the United
States and more than 90 other countries.
The 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,
research fellowships and career development
awards.
The AACR Annual Meeting attracts more than
18,000 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, treatment and
patient care. Including Cancer Discovery,
the AACR publishes seven major peer-reviewed
journals: Cancer Research; Clinical
Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer
Therapeutics; Molecular Cancer
Research; Cancer Epidemiology,
Biomarkers & Prevention; and Cancer
Prevention Research.
AACR journals represented 20 percent of the
market share of total citations in 2009. The
AACR also publishes CR, a magazine for
cancer survivors and their families, patient
advocates, physicians and scientists.
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