| August 8,
2007
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Cancer
Aug. 14, 2007 -- The typical Western diet
may be more than just hazardous to the health of patients treated
for colon cancer. New research suggests it may be deadly.
Former patients in the study who ate the most red and processed
meats, refined grains, fats, and sugars were about three times as
likely to die or have their cancers recur as patients who ate these
foods the least.
While there is no shortage of evidence linking the so-called Western
diet to an increased risk for developing colon cancer, the study
is among the first to examine the impact of such a diet on survival
among patients treated for the disease.
The findings must be confirmed, but Dana-Farber Cancer Center oncologist
Jeffrey Meyerhardt, MD, a researcher on the team, says they cannot
be ignored by colon cancer patients or their physicians.
The study appears in the Aug. 15 issue of the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
"Doctors who treat colon cancer patients need to have the conversation
about diet,” he tells WebMD. "From my own experience I know that
patients ask about this a lot. They want to know what they should
be eating and whether they should be exercising. But it is hard
to give recommendations without firm data.”
Diet and Death From Colon Cancer
The study included 1,009 patients treated with both surgery and
chemotherapy for colon cancer that had spread to the lymph nodes
but not to distant sites, such as the liver or lungs (stage III
disease), between April of 1999 and May of 2001.
Patients were asked to fill out standardized questionnaires designed
to identify their food preferences and dietary intake during and
six months after undergoing chemotherapy.
Based on these findings, Meyerhardt and colleagues identified two
major dietary patterns: the "Western” diet, characterized by high
intakes of red and processed meats, sweets, refined grains, and
desserts, and a diet defined by the researchers as "prudent,” which
was high in fruits, vegetables, poultry, and fish.
Patients were followed for roughly five years, during which time
324 experienced recurrences of their colon cancer and 223 deaths
occurred among these relapsed patients. Just 28 deaths were recorded
among patients with no evidence of cancer recurrence.
Colon cancer recurrences or death were nearly 3.5 times more common
among patients who most closely followed a Western diet than among
patients who followed it the least.
When they looked at the prudent dietary pattern, no relationship
was found between the prudent diet and colon cancer recurrence or
death.
"Because this was an observational study, causality cannot and
should not be drawn from these data,” Meyerhardt and colleagues
wrote. "Nonetheless, [they] suggest that a diet characterized by
higher intakes of red and processed meats, sweets, and desserts,
french fries, and refined grains increases the risk of cancer recurrence
and decreases survival.”
More Study Needed
In addition to confirming the findings, further research is needed
to understand exactly what components of the two diets are harmful
and beneficial to colon cancer patients and former patients, Meyerhardt
says.
In an interview with WebMD, American Cancer Society spokesman Michael
Thun, MD, called the study provocative. But he agreed that they
must be confirmed.
"We test many, many different drug combinations to treat cancer,
but researchers are only now beginning to concentrate on diet and
other lifestyle changes that can potentially affect the prognosis
and survival of cancer patients,” he says.
Thun points out there are many good reasons for eating a diet rich
in fruits vegetables and whole grains and limiting red and processed
meats, refined grains, fats, and sugars.
"We can’t say with certainty that improving [colon cancer] survival
is one of them, but it is worth finding out,” he says.
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