| July 17,
2007
Reuters
Diet Does Not Improve Breast Cancer
Survival
Among breast cancer
survivors, adopting a low-fat diet high in vegetables, fruit and
fiber does not prevent the cancer from returning or prolong survival,
according to a paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Dr. John P. Pierce and his associates designed the Women's Healthy
Eating and Living (WHEL) trial, based on evidence that plant-derived
foods contain anti-cancer chemicals.
Pierce, at the University of California, San Diego, and his team
describe the intervention as "a telephone counseling program
supplemented with cooking classes and newsletters that promoted
daily targets of 5 vegetable servings plus 16 ounces of vegetable
juice; 3 fruit servings; 30 grams of fiber; and 15 to 20 percent
of" calories from fat.
Subjects in the comparison group received care as usual and were
given publications from the National Cancer Institute and the US
Department of Health and Human Services, describing the "5-A-Day"
dietary guidelines. In addition to five servings of vegetables and
fruits, the diet recommends 20 grams of fiber and less than 30 percent
of calories from fat.
Between 1995 and 2000, WHEL investigators enrolled more than 3,000
women who were previously treated for breast cancer. Follow-up continued
until 2006. They report outcomes for 1,537 subjects randomly assigned
to the intervention group and 1,561 assigned to the comparison group.
As noted, the special diet did not prevent breast cancer from returning
and it did not improve survival. Roughly 17 percent of patients
in each group had their cancer return and about 10 percent in each
died during follow-up.
In a related editorial, Dr. Susan M. Gapstur and Dr. Seema Khan,
from the Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, compared the WHEL
study findings with those of the Women's Intervention Nutrition
Study (WINS). According to WINS trial results, a low-fat diet imparted
significant increases in cancer-free survival, which was associated
with a 6-pound weight difference between study groups at year 3.
In the WHEL study, on the other hand, weight loss and amount of
daily calories did not differ between the two patient groups, and
the actual percentage of calories from fat increased during the
trial in both groups.
The editorialists suggest that "these results call into question
the validity of some components of the self-reported dietary data,"
and they attribute the negative findings at least partially to lack
of adherence to the diet.
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