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imported_Joe
05-16-2005, 12:19 PM
Low-fat diet, aspirin, cut cancer relapse - studies
Last Updated: May 16, 2005



ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) - A low-fat diet and aspirin, both shown to help reduce the risk of cancer, may also help keep it from coming back in some patients, researchers reported on Monday.


Breast cancer patients who followed a modest low-fat diet, cutting oils, margarine and red meat, were 24 percent less likely to have their cancer come back, one team found.

In another study, colon cancer patients who took regular aspirin were 50 percent less likely to have a relapse.

Doctors at the American Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting said they were delighted to have some simple suggestions to offer patients who have undergone surgery, chemotherapy or radiation and now want to know what to do to keep the cancer from returning.

"I think it's exciting," said Dr. Robert Morgan, who treats patients with breast, brain and ovarian cancer at the City of Hope Cancer Center in Duarte, California.

"I will definitely counsel them that this is true. I am sure that it will result in more referrals to nutritionists."

But Dr. Eric Winer of Harvard's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute was skeptical. "The one thing you don't want is for every woman who has breast cancer to feel she is damaging her health if she has an ice cream cone," he said in an interview.

Winer said he would need more data from studies showing it was really the low-fat diet that had the effect.

For the diet study, Dr. Rowan Chlebowski of the University of California Los Angeles and colleagues worked with more than 2,400 women being treated for breast cancer.

They put 975 of them on a moderately low fat diet, with 33 grams of fat a day, and compared their progress to the other 1,462 women, who ate on average 51 grams a day.

It was in line with government recommendations to eat less fat and more fruits and vegetables, Chlebowski said. They met with nutritionists eight times and had their eating habits checked with random telephone calls.

JETTISONING JUNK FOOD

"Things eliminated would be things like chips, cheese and crackers - fat-rich dairy - and substitute things like popcorn," he said. Fast-food is also dangerous, he said. "One breakfast sandwich has 47 fat grams," Chlebowski told a news conference.

The researchers were surprised by one thing. About 80 percent of breast cancers are fueled in part by the hormone estrogen, which is made by fat cells.

Studies have shown that low-fat diets reduce the risk of breast cancer and doctors had thought it might be because fat cells produce estrogen.

But in Chlebowski's study, the most pronounced effect was in the 20 percent of women whose tumors were hormone-receptor negative, meaning they do not respond to estrogen.

In that group, the low-fat diet reduced the risk of cancer coming back by 42 percent over the five years the patients have been watched so far and 8 percent fewer of them relapsed after four years.

The women lost an average of four pounds (2 kg) so the weight loss could be a factor, he said. The study should fuel more research, experts agreed.

In the colon cancer study, Dr. Charles Fuchs and colleagues at Dana-Farber watched more than 800 stage III colon cancer patients, whose cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes but no farther.

About 9 percent, or 75, of the patients consistently took aspirin on their own for various reasons. Those patients had a 50 percent lower overall risk of relapse and death, said Dr. Jeffrey Meyerhardt, who worked with Fuchs on the study.

Non-aspirin drugs called COX-2 inhibitors had a similar effect, but too few patients took them regularly for the researchers to be able to tell if the result was significant, Meyerhardt said.

Normally, Meyerhardt said, surgery alone will cure only about 50 percent of Stage 3 colon cancer patients so anything that will bring that number up is welcome.

Christine
05-16-2005, 01:20 PM
Thanks Joe! That's just what I needed to know, even though I already knew about a low fat diet.
This conclusion mostly indicates that women with BC should lower the saturated kind of fats in their diet that can easily be elimiated by checking the nutrition labels on most foods pirchased. I would recommend monounsaturated oils, such as olive oil and canola oil in moderation. Remember fats at 9 cal/gram are higher in calorie than fruits and veggies, legumes and grains at 4cal/gram.
I should also mention that an abundance of dietary fatand sucrose have the potential of turning into a form of fat called triglcerides that can travel through your bloodstream which causes obesity as it goes on to fill more fat cells. However , we should all realize that exercising 3-4 days /week can be the best therapy to put our body in proper nutritional balance in our daily living.

Hope you all get the message.
Hugs, Christine

StephN
05-16-2005, 05:30 PM
Looks like the good news just keeps on coming.
And what a classy pic, Christine!

Well, it was interesting that there was a mention about Her2 positive patients, but for many of us with very aggressive disease diet may not be much of a factor.
You know me and how I eat, so I just try to do everything possible to keep it at bay. But in preventing a recurrence, I had virtually no say against my cancer.
If I had been overweight and eating too much fat, then there would have been a change to make.
We saw three McDonald's during our trip to France and gagged every time! Our friends over there say that the only thing they like there are the - ready for this?? The French fries!

*_Vicki Z_*
05-17-2005, 10:24 AM
You're right. Keep coming with the good news. In today's Los Angeles Times, the "Low-Fat Diet Found to Reduce Recurrence of a Breast Cancer," like Steph N mentions, does say, "virtually all of the improvement came in the women whose tumors were not sensitive to estrogen." Amazing. This is more "ink" on the er comparisons than I've ever read in the past. Looks like the mainstream news is beginning to distinguish these things.

To Christine, is 33 mg. (like the study) the right amount of fat grams per day? What about my 10 raw almonds I eat daily and 3 walnuts I enjoy on occasion? I've switched totally to olive oil and eat no butter, but I do still enjoy chicken, salmon and an occasional steak.

Bless all of you,

Vicki Z

Litagrier
05-24-2005, 07:32 AM
My first post: Stage IIIa dx 11/03, 3 positive nodes, Her2 3+++, mastectomy, completed chemo 5-04, radiation 8-04. I've read the lo-fat diet advisory, but it seems to contradict the one showing the addition of olive oil to the diet to be extremely beneficial for HER2 bc patients. How to reconcile these two conflicting advisories?

Litagrier
05-24-2005, 07:33 AM
My first post: Stage IIIa dx 11/03, 3 positive nodes, Her2 3+++, mastectomy, completed chemo 5-04, radiation 8-04. I've read the lo-fat diet advisory, but it seems to contradict the one showing the addition of olive oil to the diet to be extremely beneficial for HER2 bc patients. How to reconcile these two conflicting advisories?