Diet and Breast Cancer, Myths and Uncertainties
Diet and Breast Cancer, Myths and Uncertainties by Aditi
Miscall
No area of oncology is more complex and controversial than the
relationship of cancer and diet. Everyone would like to believe
that there is some diet which can substantially affect the
likelihood of cancer, or better still to cure it once contracted.
But to date, the evidence of the effect of diet is unclear and
often inconsistent.
All reputable sources agree that no diet outright cures cancer. Nor
is there strong evidence to support the view that any particular
diet prevents contracting it. But there are many studies that
suggest that occurrence, recurrence and survivability may be
affected by the foods we choose.
Though far from certain, many studies examined by researchers at
Cornell University were able to correlate lower death rates - an
increased five or ten year survivability, with certain dietary
choices.
In one study examined (the Nurses Health Study), 1,982 women who
had already developed breast cancer were followed for an average of
13 years. Over 1,200 had cancers that had not metastasized
(spreading of a primary tumor to other areas producing secondary
tumors of the same type). Survival rates of cancer patients whose
disease has spread are known to be much lower (21% five-year
survival, as contrasted to 86% for those whose cancer has not
metastasized).
Some in the first group ate larger amounts of poultry and fish,
containing protein and omega-3 fatty acids. They had significantly
lower risk of death than women in the group who did not consume as
much. Further, women who ate large amounts of hydrogenated oils had
a significantly higher death rate.
Another study was carried out by the National Cancer Institute of
more than 2,400 individuals. A subset, 975 women, who had
contracted breast cancer consumed a low fat diet (33.3g per day)
for five years. Another 1,462 consumed 51.3 g per day. The low fat
group experienced a 42% reduction in recurrence.
The difficulty with all these studies is they are looking only at
associations, not causation. It's unclear from the data what is
relevant. Do these dietary choices reflect only the fact that women
who focus on maintaining a healthy diet are making healthier
lifestyle choices overall? Or, are the foods themselves actually
helpful or harmful, and to what degree?
As with many studies involving fruits and vegetables, the answer is
unclear. Apart from those which contain antioxidants, any
beneficial effect is simply not known with confidence. In this
case, however, the evidence is strong that foods high in
antioxidants do help reduce the chances of contracting breast
cancer.
Free radicals in the blood stream are ionized atoms that are known
to be able to harm cells. Antioxidants 'gobble them up' - reduce
the amount by combining with the free radicals, rendering them
harmless.
But fat studies are less clear. The leading theory says, since high
estrogen levels are known to highly correlate with higher breast
cancer risk, and fat efficiently stores estrogen, then lowering fat
lowers the risk.
The flawed conclusion that is sometimes drawn however is the belief
that eating fat makes you fat. But it isn't the consumption of fat
that causes higher body fat, per se. Eating more calories than are
used causes the body to store the excess in fat, leading to a
higher body fat percentage. And, fat contains more calories per
unit weight than other foods. The route is indirect.
Despite difficult to interpret or incomplete evidence, there is one
thing all experts can readily agree on: maintaining a healthy diet
and lifestyle are wise choices. Whether they lower the risk of
contracting breast cancer or not, for the 1 in 12 women who will
get it sometime in their life, being in optimal health helps combat
it before, during and after.
Aditi Miscall is a Independent SUZANNE Sales Consultant and the
owner of http://www.ageless-diva.com
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