The Anti-Cancer Diet: A Review of the Evidence
Based on the article “
Nutrition
and cancer: A review of the evidence for an anti-cancer diet” by
Michael S. Donaldson, in
Nutrition Journal
Edited (with Introduction) by Dr. Don Rose, Writer, Life Alert
--
Nutrition, in general, is known to play a key role in fighting and
preventing disease. Cancer is no exception. Taking the proper
dietary steps is perhaps the best way (and the least expensive) to
minimize the risk of cancer -- especially for
seniors, since levels of
many natural disease fighters in the body typically decrease with
age. This article surveys some of the evidence for how proper
nutrition can ward off many types of cancers, or help promote
recovery -- advice that anyone at any age can benefit from. --Dr.
Don Rose
--
Introduction
It has been estimated that 30 to 40 percent of all cancers can
be prevented by lifestyle and dietary measures alone. Obesity,
nutrient sparse foods such as concentrated sugars and refined flour
products that contribute to impaired glucose metabolism (which leads
to diabetes), low fiber intake, consumption of red meat, and
imbalance of omega 3 and omega 6 fats all contribute to excess
cancer risk. Intake of flax seed, especially its lignan fraction,
and abundant portions of fruits and vegetables will lower cancer
risk. Allium and cruciferous vegetables are especially beneficial,
with broccoli sprouts being the densest source of sulforophane.
Protective elements in a cancer prevention diet include selenium,
folic acid, vitamin B-12, vitamin D, chlorophyll, and antioxidants
such as the carotenoids (α-carotene, β-carotene, lycopene, lutein,
cryptoxanthin). Ascorbic acid has limited benefits orally, but could
be very beneficial intravenously. Supplementary use of oral
digestive enzymes and probiotics also has merit as anticancer
dietary measures.
When a diet is compiled according to the guidelines discussed here,
it is likely that there would be at least a 60 to 70 percent
decrease in breast, colorectal, and prostate cancers, and even a 40
to 50 percent decrease in lung cancer, along with similar reductions
in cancers at other sites. Such a diet would be conducive to
preventing cancer and would favor recovery from cancer as well.
REVIEW
Background
The field of investigation of the role of nutrition in the cancer
process is very broad. It is becoming clearer as research continues
that nutrition plays a major role in cancer. It has been estimated
by the American Institute for Cancer Research and the World Cancer
Research Fund that 30–40 percent of all cancers can be prevented by
appropriate diets, physical activity, and maintenance of appropriate
body weight [
1].
It is likely to be higher than this for some individual cancers.
Most of the research on nutrition and cancer has been reductionist;
that is, a particular food or a nutrient has been studied in
relation to its impact on tumor formation/regression or some other
end point of cancer at a particular site in the body. These studies
are very helpful in seeing the details of the mechanisms of disease.
However, they do not help give an overall picture of how to prevent
cancer on a dietary level. Even less, they tell little of how to eat
when a person already has a cancer and would like to eat a diet that
is favorable to their recovery.
This review will focus on dietary factors which have been shown to
contribute to increased risk of cancer, and then on those additional
protective dietary factors which reduce cancer risk. Finally, some
whole-diet studies will be mentioned which give a more complete
picture of how these individual factors work together to reduce
cancer risk.
Cancer risk factors
Overconsumption of energy (calories)
Eating too much food is one of the main
risk factors for cancer. This can be shown two ways: (1) by the
additional risks of malignancies caused by obesity, and (2) by the
protective effect of eating less food.
Obesity has reached epidemic proportions in the United States.
Sixty-four percent of the adult population is overweight or obese
[2]. About 1 in 50 are now severely obese (with high Body Mass Index
-- BMI > 40 kg/m2) [3]. Mokdad et al [4] found that poor diet and
physical inactivity was the second leading cause of death (400,000
per year in the USA), and would likely overtake tobacco as the
leading cause of death.
It was estimated in a recent study, from a prospective cancer
prevention cohort, that overweight and obesity accounted for 14
percent of all cancer deaths in men and 20 percent of those in women
[5]. Significant positive associations were found between obesity
and higher death rates for the following cancers: esophagus, colon
and rectum, liver, gallbladder, pancreas, kidney, stomach (in men),
prostate, breast, uterus, cervix, and ovary [5]. The authors
estimated that over 90,000 cancer deaths per year could be avoided
if the adult population all maintained a normal weight (BMI < 25.0)
[5]. Clearly, obesity is a major risk factor for cancer.
On the other side, careful menu planning brings about an approach
entitled
CRON-Calorie Restriction with Optimal Nutrition. The basic idea
is to eat a reduced amount of food (about 70–80 percent of the
amount required to maintain "normal" body weight) while still
consuming all of the necessary amounts of vitamins, minerals, and
other necessary nutrients. The only restriction is the total amount
of energy (calories) that is consumed. While being difficult to
practice, this approach has a lot of scientific merit for being able
to extend average lifespans of many species of animals including
rats, mice, fish, and possibly primates (currently being tested).
Along with this lifespan extension is a reduction in chronic
diseases that are common to mankind, reviewed in Hursting et al [6].
A recent meta-analysis of 14 experimental studies found that energy
restriction resulted in a 55% reduction in spontaneous tumors in
laboratory mice [7]. Calorie restriction inhibited induced mammary
tumors in mice [8] and suppressed implanted tumor growth and
prolonged survival in energy restricted mice [9]. Among Swedish
women who had been hospitalized for anorexia nervosa (definitely
lower caloric intake, but not adequate nutrition) prior to age 40,
there was a 23% lower incidence of breast cancer for nulliparous
women and a 76% lower incidence for parous women [10]. So, too many
calories is definitely counter-productive, and slightly less than
normal is very advantageous.
Glucose metabolism
Refined sugar is a high energy, low nutrient food –
junk food. "Unrefined" sugar (honey, evaporated cane juice, etc) is also
very concentrated and is likely to contribute to the same problems as
refined sugar. Refined wheat flour products are lacking the wheat germ and
bran, so they have 78 percent less fiber, an average of 74 percent less of
the B vitamins and vitamin E, and 69 percent less of the minerals (USDA Food
database, data not shown). Concentrated sugars and refined flour products
make up a large portion of the carbohydrate intake in the average American
diet.
One way to measure the impact of these foods on the body is through the
glycemic index (GI). GI is an indication of the blood sugar response of the
body to a standardized amount of carbohydrate in a food. The glycemic load
(GL) takes into account the amount of food eaten. An international table of
the GI and GL of a wide variety of foods has been published [11].
Case-control studies and prospective population studies have tested the
hypothesis that there is an association between a diet with a high GL and
cancer. The case control studies have found consistent increased risk of a
high GL with gastric [12], upper aero digestive tract [13], endometrial
[14], ovarian [15], colon or colorectal cancers [16,17]. In multiple
studies, diabetes has been linked with increased risk of colorectal cancer
[34-37], endometrial cancer [38], and pancreatic cancer [35,39]. It is clear
that severe dysregulation of glucose metabolism is a risk factor for cancer.
Foods which contribute to hyperinsulinemia, such as refined sugar, foods
containing refined sugar, and refined flour products should be avoided and
eliminated from a cancer protective diet.
Low fiber
Unrefined plant foods typically have an abundance of
fiber. Dairy products, eggs, and meat all contain no fiber. Refined grain
products also have most of the dietary fiber removed from them. So, a diet
high in animal products and refined grains (a typical diet in the USA) is
low in fiber. Slattery et al [40] found an inverse correlation between
vegetable, fruit and whole grain intake plant food intake and rectal cancer,
while refined grains were associated with increased risk of rectal cancer. A
threshold of about 5 daily servings of vegetables was needed to reduce
cancer risk, and the effect was stronger among
older subjects [40].
Red meat
Red meat has been implicated in colon and rectal
cancer. A Medline search in February 2003 uncovered 26 reports of human
studies investigating the link between diet and colon or colorectal cancer.
Of the 26 reports, 21 of them reported a significant positive relationship
between red meat and colon or colorectal cancer [17,41-64]. Meat and the
heterocyclic amines formed in cooking have been correlated to breast cancer
in a case-control study in Uruguay as well [66].
Omega 3:6 ratio imbalance
Omega 3 fats
(alpha-linolenic acid, EPA, DHA) have been shown in animal studies to
protect from cancer, while
Omega 6 fats (linoleic acid, arachidonic acid) have been found to
be cancer promoting fats. Now there have been several studies that have
tested this hypothesis in relation to breast cancer. Except for the study by
London et al [67], all of these studies found an association between a
higher ratio of N-3 to N-6 fats and reduced risk of breast cancer. Flax seed
oil and DHA (from an algae source) both can be used to increase the intake
of N-3 fat, with DHA being a more efficient, sure source.
Anti-cancer arsenal: preventive agents and protective nutrients
Flax seed
Flax seed is an excellent source of dietary fiber,
omega 3 fat (as alpha-linolenic acid), and lignans, and is a more potent
source of phytoestrogens than soy products.
Ground flax seeds have been studied for their effect on cancer. In one
study, the flax seed, its lignan fraction, or the oil were added to the diet
of mice who had previously been administered a chemical carcinogen to induce
cancer. All three treatments reduced the established tumor load. In another
study, the flax lignan SDG was fed to mice starting one week after treatment
with a known carcinogen. The number of tumors per rat was reduced by 46%
compared to the control group [71]. Flax or its lignan (SDG) were tested to
see if they would prevent melanoma metastasis. The flax or lignan fraction
were fed to mice two weeks before and after injection of melanoma cells. The
flax treatment (at 2.5, 5, or 10% of diet intake) resulted in a 32, 54, and
63 percent reduction in the number of tumors, compared to the control [72].
The SDG also reduced the tumor number, from a median of 62 in the control
group to 38, 36, and 29 tumors per mouse in the SDG groups, respectively
[73]. More recently, Thompson's research group studied mice injected with
human breast cancer cells. After the injection the mice were fed a basal
diet (lab mouse chow) for 8 weeks while the tumors grew. Then one group
continued the basal diet and another was fed a 10% flax seed diet. The flax
seed reduced the tumor growth rate and reduced metastasis by 45% [74].
Other researchers have tested flax seed and prostate cancer. In an animal
model using mice, Lin et al [77] found that a diet supplemented with 5% flax
inhibited the growth and development of prostate cancer. A pilot study of 25
men who were scheduled for prostatectomy surgery were instructed to eat a
low-fat diet (20% or less of energy intake) and take 30 grams of ground
flaxseed per day. During the follow-up (of an average of 34 days), there
were significant changes in serum cholesterol, total testosterone, and the
free androgen index [78].
In summary, flax seed and its lignan were able to reduce tumor growth (both
in number and size of tumors), prevent metastasis, and even cause increased
differentiation of mouse mammary tissue in suckling mice (making the
offspring less susceptible to carcinogenesis even when not consuming any
flax products). In addition, ground flax seed may be a very beneficial food
for men battling prostate cancer.
Fruits and vegetables
One of the most important messages of modern nutrition
research is that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables protects against
cancer; in fact, this same diet protects against almost all other diseases,
too, including cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There are many
mechanisms by which fruits and vegetables are protective, and an enormous
body of research supports the recommendation for people to eat more fruits
and vegetables.
Block et al [80] reviewed about 200 studies of cancer and fruit and
vegetable intake. A statistically significant protective effect of fruits
and vegetables was found in 128 of 156 studies that gave relative risks. For
most cancers, people in the lower quartile (1/4 of the population) who ate
the least amount of fruits and vegetables had about twice the risk of cancer
compared to those who in the upper quartile who ate the most fruits and
vegetables. Even in lung cancer, after accounting for smoking, increasing
fruits and vegetables causes an estimated reduction of an additional 20 to
33 percent [1].
Steinmetz and Potter reviewed the relationship between fruits, vegetables,
and cancer in 206 human epidemiologic studies and 22 animal studies [81].
They found "the evidence for a protective effect of greater vegetable and
fruit consumption is consistent for cancers of the stomach, esophagus, lung,
oral cavity and pharynx, endometrium, pancreas, and colon." Vegetables,
particularly raw vegetables, were found to be protective; 85% of the studies
that queried raw vegetable consumption found a protective effect. Allium
vegetables, carrots, green vegetables, cruciferous vegetables, and tomatoes
also had a fairly consistent protective effect [81]. Allium vegetables
(garlic, onion, leeks, and scallions) are particularly potent and have
separately been found to be protective for stomach and colorectal cancers
[82,83] and prostate cancer [84].
There are many substances that are protective in fruits and vegetables, so
that the entire effect is not very likely to be due to any single nutrient
or phytochemical. Steinmetz and Potter list possible protective elements,
including allium compounds, isoflavones, protease inhibitors, phytosterols,
inositol hexaphosphate, vitamin C, lutein, folic acid, beta carotene (and
other carotenoids), lycopene, selenium, vitamin E, flavonoids, and dietary
fiber [81].
A joint report by the World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute
for Cancer Research found convincing evidence that a high fruit and
vegetable diet would reduce cancers of the mouth and pharynx, esophagus,
lung, stomach, and colon and rectum; evidence of probable risk reduction was
found for cancers of the larynx, pancreas, breast, and bladder [1].
Cruciferous vegetables
Cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower,
cabbage, Brussels sprouts) contain sulforophane, which has anti-cancer
properties. A case-control study in China found that intake of cruciferous
vegetables, measured by urinary secretion of isothiocyanates, was inversely
related to the risk of breast cancer; the quartile with the highest intake
only had 50% of the risk of the lowest intake group [89]. In the Nurses'
Health Study a high intake of cruciferous vegetables (5 or more
servings/week vs less than two servings/week) was associated with a 33%
lower risk of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma [90]. In the Health Professionals
Follow-up Study bladder cancer was only weakly associated with low intake of
fruits and vegetables, but high intake (5 or more servings/week vs 1 or less
servings/wk) of cruciferous vegetables was associated with a statistically
significant 51% decrease in bladder cancer [91].
Also, prostate cancer risk was found to be reduced by cruciferous vegetable
consumption in a population-based case-control study carried out in western
Washington state. Three or more servings per week, compared to less than one
serving of cruciferous vegetables per week, resulted in a statistically
significant 41% decrease in prostate cancer risk [92]. Similar protective
effects of cruciferous vegetables were seen in a multi-ethnic case-control
study [93]. A prospective study in Shanghai, China found that men with
detectable amounts of isothiocyanates in their urine (metabolic products
that come from cruciferous vegetables) had a 35% decreased risk of lung
cancer. Among men that had one or two genetic polymorphisms that caused them
to eliminate these isothiocyanates slower, there was a 64% or 72% decreased
risk of lung cancer, respectively [94].
Broccoli sprouts have a very high concentration of sulforophane since this
compound originates in the seed and is not made in the plant as it grows
[95,96]. One sprout contains all of the sulforophane that is present in a
full-grown broccoli plant. So, if sulforophane is especially
cancer-protective, it would seem reasonable to include some broccoli sprouts
in an anti-cancer diet.
Selenium
Selenium is a mineral with anti-cancer properties.
Many studies in the last several years have shown that selenium is a potent
protective nutrient for some forms of cancer. The Arizona Cancer Center
posted a selenium fact sheet listing the major functions of selenium in the
body [97]:
1. Selenium is present in the active site of many enzymes which catalyze
oxidation-reduction reactions; these reactions may encourage cancerous cells
to undergo apoptosis (death). 2. Selenium is a component of the antioxidant
enzyme glutathione peroxidase; 3. Selenium improved the
immune system’s
ability to respond to infections; 4. Selenium causes the formation of
natural killer cells; 5. P450 enzymes in the liver may be induced by
selenium, leading to detoxification of some carcinogenic molecules; 6.
Selenium inhibits prostaglandins that cause inflammation; 7. Selenium
enhances male fertility by increased sperm motility; 8. Selenium can
decrease the rate of tumor growth.
A serendipitous randomized, double-blind, controlled trial of a 200 μg/day
selenium supplement in the southeastern region of the USA (where soil
selenium levels are low) found that the primary endpoints of skin cancer
were not improved by the selenium supplement, but that other cancer
incidence rates were decreased by selenium [98,99]. There was a significant
reduction in total cancer incidence (105 vs 137 cases, P = 0.03), prostate
cancer (22 vs 42 cases, P = 0.005), a marginally significant reduction in
colorectal cancer incidence (9 vs 19 cases, P = 0.057), and a reduction in
cancer mortality, all cancer sites (40 vs 66 deaths, P = 0.008) (selenium
versus control group cases reported, respectively) [98]. The selenium
supplement was most effective in ex-smokers and for those who began the
study with the lowest levels of serum selenium. Several prospective studies
have also examined the role of selenium in cancer prevention, particularly
for prostate cancer.
Overall, it appears that poor selenium levels, especially for men, are a
cancer risk. If a person has low selenium levels and other antioxidant
defenses are also low, the cancer risk is increased even further. Women do
not appear to be as sensitive to selenium, as breast cancer has not been
found to be influenced by selenium status in several studies [100-104],
although both men and women were found to be protected by higher levels of
selenium from colon cancer [100] and lung cancer [105,106]. Good vegetarian
sources of selenium are whole grains and legumes grown in selenium-rich soil
in the western United States, brazil nuts (by far the most dense source of
selenium), nutritional yeast, brewers yeast, and sunflower seeds.
Chlorophyll
All green plants contain chlorophyll, the
light-collecting molecule. Chlorophyll and its derivatives are very
effective at binding polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (carcinogens largely
from incomplete combustion of fuels), heterocyclic amines (generated when
grilling foods), aflatoxin (a toxin from molds in foods which causes liver
cancer), and other hydrophobic molecules. The chlorophyll-carcinogen complex
is much harder for the body to absorb, so most of it is swept out as waste.
The chemoprotective effect of chlorophyll and its derivatives has been
tested in laboratory cell cultures and animals [107,108]. There is much
compelling evidence for the anti-carcinogenic effects of chlorophyll. For
example, a 55% reduction in aflatoxin-DNA compounds were found in the group
that took 100 mg of chlorophyllin three times a day [109].
Vitamin B-12
Vitamin B-12 has not been proven to be an anti-cancer
agent, but there is some evidence indicating that it could be beneficial.
The form of administered vitamin B-12 may be important.
Laboratory evidence for the effects of vitamin B12 was seen in a study with
vitamin B-12 deficient rats. Choi et al [116] found that the colonic DNA of
the B-12 deficient rats had undergone changes that could increase risk of
carcinogenesis. In two studies, a relation between lower vitamin B12 status
(but not deficiency) and statistically significant higher risk of breast
cancer was found [117,118]. So, there is evidence from lab studies,
prospective cohort studies, and mechanistic studies showing that vitamin
B-12 is an important nutrient for genetic stability, DNA repair,
carcinogenesis, and cancer therapy.
Folic Acid
Folic acid (folate) is the dark green leafy vegetable
vitamin. Many studies have found a significant reduction in colon, rectal,
and breast cancer with higher intakes of folic acid and their related
nutrients (vitamin B-6 and B-12). Alcohol is an antagonist of folate, so
drinking alcoholic beverages greatly magnifies the cancer risk of a
low-folate diet. Cravo et al [124] used 5 mg of folic acid a day in a study
of 20 patients with colonic adenoma polyps, and found that the folic acid
could reverse DNA hypomethylation (that is, enhance cancer suppression) in 7
of 12 patients who had only one polyp.
The cancer risk associated with low folate intake is probably higher for
colon cancer than for breast cancer. Most of the breast cancer studies only
found a protective effect of folate among women who consumed alcohol.
However, among women residents of Shanghai who consumed no alcohol, no
vitamin supplements and ate unprocessed, unfortified foods, there was a 29%
decreased risk of breast cancer among those with the highest intake of
folate [125]. So, there may be a true protective effect that is masked in
the Western populations by so many other risk factors. Two studies showed
that the risk of cancer due to family history can be modified by high folate
intake, so a prudent anti-cancer diet would be high in dark green leafy
vegetables. The mean intake of folic acid on the Hallelujah Diet was 594
μg/day for men and 487 μg/day for women [88].
Vitamin D
Vitamin D is produced primarily from the exposure of
the skin to sunshine. Even casual exposure of the face, hands, and arms in
the summer generates a large amount of vitamin D. In fact, simulated
sunshine, equivalent to standing on a sunny beach until a slight pinkness of
the skin was detected, was equivalent to a 20,000 IU oral dose of vitamin D2
[126]. (Note that the RDA is 400 IU for most adults.) It has been estimated
that 1,000 IU per day is the minimal amount needed to maintain adequate
levels of vitamin D in the absence of sunshine [126], and that up to 4,000
IU per day can be safely used with additional benefit [127].
The concentration of the active hormonal form of vitamin D is tightly
regulated in the blood by the kidneys. This active hormonal form of vitamin
D has the potent anti-cancer properties. It has been discovered that various
types of normal and cancerous tissues, including prostate cells [128], colon
tissue [129], breast, ovarian and cervical tissue [130], pancreatic tissue
[131] and a lung cancer cell line [132] all have the ability to convert the
major circulating form of vitamin D, 25(OH)D, into the active hormonal form,
1,25(OH)2D. So, there is a local mechanism in many tissues of the body for
converting the form of vitamin D in the body that is elevated by sunshine
exposure into a hormone that has anticancer activity.
Indeed, 25(OH)D has been shown to inhibit growth of colonic epithelial cells
[133], primary prostatic epithelial cells [134], and pancreatic cells [131].
So, the laboratory work is confirming what had been seen some time ago in
ecological studies of populations and sunshine exposure.
The mortality rates for colon, breast, and ovary cancer in the USA show a
marked north-south gradient [135]. In ecological studies of populations and
sunlight exposure (no individual data), sunlight has been found to have a
protective effect for prostate cancer [136], ovarian cancer [137], and
breast cancer [138]. Recently Grant found that sunlight was also protective
for bladder, endometrial, renal cancer, multiple myeloma, and Non-Hodgkins
lymphoma in Europe [139] and bladder, esophageal, kidney, lung, pancreatic,
rectal, stomach, and corpus uteri cancer in the USA [140].
Antioxidants
Alpha and Beta Carotene and other Carotenoids
There is a large body of literature indicating that
dietary carotenoids are cancer preventative. Alpha-carotene has been found
to be a stronger protective agent than its well-known isomer beta-carotene.
Studies tend to agree that overall intake of carotenoids is more protective
than a high intake of a single carotenoid. So, a variety of fruits and
vegetables is still a better anti-cancer strategy than just using a single
vegetable high in a specific carotenoid.
The richest source of alpha-carotene is carrots and carrot juice, with
pumpkins and winter squash as a second dense source. There is approximately
one μg of alpha-carotene for every two μg of beta-carotene in carrots.
Lycopene
Of the various carotenoids, lycopene has been found to
be very protective, particularly for prostate cancer. The major dietary
source of lycopene is tomatoes, with the lycopene in cooked tomatoes being
more bioavailable than that in raw tomatoes. Several prospective cohort
studies have found associations between high intake of lycopene and reduced
incidence of prostate cancer, though not all studies have produced
consistent results [144,145].
In the Health Professionals Follow-up Study there was a 21% decrease in
prostate cancer risk, comparing the highest quintile of lycopene intake with
the lowest quintile. Combined intake of tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato
juice, and pizza (which accounted for 82% of the lycopene intake) were
associated with a 35% lower risk of prostate cancer. Furthermore, lycopene
was even more protective for advanced stages of prostate cancer, with a 53%
decrease in risk [146].
In addition, another study with 450 cases and controls found an inverse
relation between plasma lycopene and prostate cancer risk among
older subjects (over 65 years of
age) without a family history of prostate cancer [148]. Among younger men,
high plasma beta-carotene was associated with a statistically significant
64% decrease in prostate cancer risk. So, the results for lycopene have been
found for dietary intakes as well as plasma levels.
In a placebo-controlled study of aspirin and beta-carotene, there was a 60%
reduction in advanced prostate cancer risk for those subjects in the placebo
group with the highest plasma lycopene levels, compared to the lowest
quintile. The beta-carotene also had a protective effect, especially for
those men with low lycopene levels [149].
In addition to these observational studies, two clinical trials have been
conducted to supplement lycopene for a short period before radical
prostatectomy. In one study, 30 mg/day of lycopene were given to 15 men in
the intervention group while 11 men in the control group were instructed to
follow National Cancer Institute recommendations to consume at least 5
servings of fruits and vegetables daily. Results showed that the lycopene
slowed the growth of prostate cancer. Subjects that took the lycopene for 3
weeks had smaller tumors [150]. In another study before radical
prostatectomy surgery, 32 men were given a tomato sauce based pasta dish
every day, which supplied 30 mg of lycopene per day. After 3 weeks, serum
and prostate lycopene levels increased 2-fold and 2.9-fold, respectively.
PSA levels (prostate-specific antigens in the blood that warn of higher
cancer risk) decreased 17%, as seen also by Kucuk et al [150]. Oxidative DNA
damage was 21% lower in subjects' leukocytes and 28% lower in prostate
tissue, compared to non-study controls.
Vitamin C
Vitamin C, or ascorbic acid, has been studied in
relation to health and is the most common supplement taken in the USA. Low
blood levels of ascorbic acid are detrimental to health and vitamin C is
correlated with overall good health and cancer prevention [153].
Use of vitamin C for cancer therapy was popularized by Linus Pauling. At
high concentrations, ascorbate is preferentially toxic to cancer cells.
There is some evidence that large doses of vitamin C, either in multiple
divided oral doses or intravenously, have beneficial effects in cancer
therapy [154-156].
While vitamin C is quite possibly an effective substance, the amounts
required for these therapeutic effects are obviously beyond dietary intakes.
However, intravenous ascorbate may be a very beneficial adjuvant therapy for
cancer with no negative side effects when administered properly.
Other Antioxidants
There are many more substances that have some benefit
for cancer therapy. Most of these substances are found in foods, but their
effective doses for therapy are much higher than the normal concentration in
the food. For example, grape seed extract contains proanthocyanidin, which
shows anticarcinogenic properties (reviewed by Cos et al [157]). Also, green
tea contains ingredients that might be of benefit.
Probiotics
The bacteria that reside in the intestinal tract
generally have a symbiotic relationship with their host. Beneficial bacteria
produce natural antibiotics to keep pathogenic bugs in check and produce
some B vitamins in the small intestine where they can be utilized.
Beneficial bacteria help with food digestion by providing extra enzymes,
such as lactase, in the small intestine. Beneficial bacteria help strengthen
the
immune
system right in the gut, where much of the interaction between the
outside world and the body goes on, and can help prevent
food allergies.
These good bacteria also help prevent cancer at various stages of
development. Lactobacillus species and Eubacterium aerofaciens, both
producers of lactic acid, were associated with lower risk of colon cancer,
while Bacteroides and Bifidobacterium species were associated with higher
risk of colon cancer [160].
There is a solid theoretical basis for why probiotics should help prevent
cancer (especially of the colon), and even reverse cancer. Probiotics
produce short chain fatty acids in the colon, which acidify the environment.
Lower colon pH is associated with lower incidence of colon cancer. Probiotic
bacteria reduce the level of procarcinogenic enzymes such as
beta-glucuronidase, nitroreductase, and azoreductase [161].
L. casei was used in two trials of patients with superficial bladder cancer.
In the first trial, the probiotic group had a 50% disease free time of 350
days, compared to 195 days for the control group [162]. The second trial
also showed that the probiotics worked better than the placebo, except for
multiple recurring tumors [163].
Except for the two studies noted above, most of the research of probiotics
and cancer has been done in animals. Studies have looked at markers of tumor
growth or at animals with chemically induced tumors. Studies in rats have
shown that probiotics can inhibit the formation of aberrant crypt foci,
thought to be a pre-cancerous lesion in the colon. Rats fed Raftilose, a
mixture of inulin and oligofructose, or Raftilose with Lactobacilli
rhamnosus (LGG) and Bifidobacterium lactis (Bb12) had a significantly lower
number of tumors compared to the control group [165]. A probiotic mixture,
without any prebiotic, given to rats fed azoxymethane reduced colon tumors
compared to the control (50% vs 90%), and also reduced the number of tumors
per tumor-bearing rat [166].
The research on probiotics and disease is still an emerging field. There is
a high degree of variation of health benefits between different strains of
bacteria. As new methods for selecting and screening probiotics become
available, the field will advance more rapidly.
Oral Enzymes
Many people diagnosed with cancer have digestion or
intestinal tract disorders as well. Impaired digestion will greatly hinder a
nutritional approach to treating cancer. If the nutrients cannot be released
from the food and taken up by the body, then the excellent food provided by
healthy diets will go to waste. Digestive enzyme supplements are used to
ensure proper and adequate digestion of food. Even raw foods, which contain
many digestive enzymes to assist in their digestion, will be more thoroughly
digested with less of the body's own resources with the use of digestive
enzymes. So, the enzymes taken with meals do not have a direct effect upon a
tumor, but assist the body in getting all of the nutrition out of the food
for healing and restoring the body to normal function.
Enzymes, especially proteases, can have direct anti-tumor activity. Wald et
al [170] reported on the anti-metastatic effect of enzyme supplements. Mice
inoculated with the Lewis lung carcinoma were treated with a proteolytic
enzyme supplement. The primary tumor was cut out, so that the metastatic
spread of the cancer could be measured. After surgical removal of the
primary tumor (day 0), 90% of the control mice died by day 18 due to
metastasized tumors. In the first group, which received the enzyme
supplement from the time of the tumor-removal surgery, 30% of the mice had
died from metastasized cancer by day 25. In the second group, which received
the enzymes from 6 days prior to removal of the primary tumor, only 10%
showed the metastatic process by day 15. In the third group, which received
the enzyme treatment since the initial inoculation of the Lewis lung
carcinoma, no metastatic spread of the tumor was discernible. 100-day
survival rates for the control, first, second, and third groups were 0, 60%,
90%, and 100%.
In a similar experiment, an enzyme mixture of papain, trypsin, and
chymotrypsin was given to mice inoculated with melanoma cells. Survival time
was prolonged in the test group (38 days in the enzyme group compared to 24
days in the control mice) and 3 of the 10 enzyme-supplemented mice were
cured. Again, a strong anti-metastatic effect of the proteolytic enzymes was
seen [171].
Further evidence of the efficacy of oral enzyme supplementation is available
from Europe. Two different studies demonstrated that two different oral
proteolytic enzyme supplements could reduce high levels of transforming
growth factor-β, which may be a factor in some cancers [172,173]. In another
study, an oral enzyme supplement was tested on multiple myeloma; control
group survival was 47 months, compared to 83 months (a 3 year gain) for
patients who took the oral enzymes for more than 6 months [174].
Enzyme supplements have also been shown to reduce side effects of cancer
therapy. In a large study in Germany, women undergoing conventional cancer
therapy were put into a control group or a group that received an oral
enzyme supplement. Disease and therapy related symptoms were all reduced,
except tumor pain, by the enzyme supplement. Also, survival was longer with
less recurrence and less metastases in the enzyme group [178].
It is clear that there are some circumstances that will be helped by enzyme
supplementation, with very little danger of negative side effects. At the
least, enzymes will improve digestion and lessen the digestive burden on the
body, leaving more reserves for disease eradication. However, as the
research indicates, the effect may be much greater than that, with the
potential for direct anti-tumor activity.
Whole Diet Studies
A diet-based cancer therapy, the Gerson Therapy, was
used to treat melanoma cancer. The five-year survival rates from their
therapy compared very favorably to conventional therapy reported in the
medical literature, especially for more advanced stages of melanoma [179].
8,984 women were followed for an average of 9.5 years, with 207 incident
cases of breast cancer during that time. Their diets were analyzed by
patterns – salad vegetables (raw vegetables and olive oil), Western
(potatoes, red meat, eggs and butter), canteen (pasta and tomato sauce), and
prudent (cooked vegetables, pulses, and fish). Only the salad vegetable diet
pattern was associated with a significantly lower risk of breast cancer,
about 35% lower. For women of normal weight (BMI under 25) the salad
vegetable pattern was even more protective, about a 61% decreased risk of
breast cancer [180]. The overall dietary pattern does make a very
significant difference.
In US-based studies the "prudent" diet has been shown to be protective for
colon cancer, while the "Western" diet has been shown to be detrimental. The
"Western" dietary pattern, with its higher intakes of red meat and processed
meats, sweets and desserts, French fries, and refined grains, was associated
with a 46% increase relative risk of colon cancer in the Nurses' Health
Study [45]. Slattery et al [17] found a two-fold increase in relative risk
of colon cancer associated with a "Western" dietary pattern, and a 35–40%
decrease in relative risk associated with the "prudent" pattern, especially
among those diagnosed at an earlier age (less than 67 years old). The "salad
vegetable" pattern is still more likely to be protective compared to the
prudent dietary pattern, but this pattern did not exist in this study
population.
In an analysis of the colon cancer data from the Health Professionals
Follow-up Study, Platz et al [56] found that there was a 71% decrease in
colon cancer risk when men with none of six established risk factors were
compared to men with at least one of these risk factors (obesity, physical
inactivity, alcohol consumption, early adulthood cigarette smoking, red meat
consumption, and low intake of folic acid from supplements). If all men had
the same health profile as these healthier 3% of the study population, colon
cancer rates would have been only 29% of what they measured.
CONCLUSIONS
What is the result when all of these things are put
together? What if all of the factors reviewed here were taken into account
and put into practice? The resultant anti-cancer diet would feature the
following elements:
- adequate, but not excessive calories,
- 10 or more servings of vegetables a day, including cruciferous and allium
vegetables (vegetable juice could meet part of this goal),
- 4 or more servings of fruits a day,
- high fiber,
- no refined sugar,
- no refined flour,
- low total fat, but containing necessary essential fatty acids (EFAs),
- no red meat,
- a balanced ratio of omega 3 and omega 6 fats, and DHA,
- flax seed as a source of phytoestrogens,
- about 200 μg/day selenium,
- 1,000 μg/day methylcobalamin (B-12),
- high intake of folic acid (from dark green vegetables),
- adequate sunshine to get vitamin D (or a 1,000 IU/day supplement),
- high intake of antioxidants and phytochemicals from fruits and vegetables,
including alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, vitamin C (from
foods), vitamin E (from foods),
- high intake of chlorophyll,
- beneficial probiotics,
- oral enzymes.
As reviewed above, reductions of 60 percent in breast cancer rates have
already been seen in human diet studies, and a 71 percent reduction in colon
cancer for men without the known modifiable risk factors. These reductions
are without taking into account many of the other factors considered in this
review, such as markedly increased fruit and vegetable intake, balanced
omega 3 and 6 fats, vitamin D, reduced sugar intake, probiotics, and enzymes
– factors which are all likely to have an impact on cancer. Certainly cancer
prevention would be possible, and cancer reversal in some cases is quite
likely.
REFERENCES
This article is based on an article entitled “
Nutrition
and cancer: A review of the evidence for an anti-cancer diet” by Michael
S Donaldson, available on the
Nutrition
Journal website. Michael Donaldson is a research scientist at the
Hallelujah Acres Foundation, a foundation for investigations pertaining to
the Hallelujah Diet.
Donaldson referenced over 200 other works in his
original article –
some of which are cited above. Instead of reprinting the long list of
references here, we refer readers to the original article.
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