The
information in this column is intended for informational
purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or
recommendations by the author. Please consult with your
physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you
have any other concerns regarding your health.
DIET
& PROSTATE CANCER RISK
The prostate
gland is a walnut-sized gland that is attached to the bottom of the
bladder. The
prostate gland wraps around
the male urethra as it arises from the bladder, and several ducts that
run between
the prostate gland and the urethra allow the prostatic secretions to be
expelled into the urethra at the time of ejaculation.
These prostatic secretions, which constitute
about 20 percent of the volume of semen, help to create the optimal
chemical
environment for sperm to thrive and migrate within the female genital
tract,
thereby enhancing sperm function.
In 2009, an
estimated 192,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed, and
approximately 27,000 men will die of this disease in the same year. Prostate cancer is the
most common non-skin
cancer that occurs in men, and is the second most common cause of
cancer death
in men. Prostate
cancer afflicts 1 out
of every 6 American men during their lifetimes, and accounts for 25
percent of
all cancer diagnoses in men (similar to the percentage of breast cancer
cases
among all cancer cases diagnosed in women).
As with the great majority of breast cancer cases, most
prostate cancers
appear to be stimulated to grow and spread by sex hormones produced by
the
gonads (and, specifically, by testosterone and other androgens produced
by the
testes, and by other tissues in the body).
There continues
to be considerable debate about the impact of diet on prostate cancer
risk, as a
result of the contradictory conclusions of most epidemiological
research studies
regarding dietary factors and cancer risk, including prostate cancer
(which is,
in turn, a reflection of the relatively low scientific power of dietary
survey-based
studies, in general). Now,
a large new prospective
European clinical study has raised the possibility that the level of
some
dietary nutrients (isoflavones) in the blood may actually have an
impact on
prostate cancer risk. This
study’s
findings appear in the current volume of the British
Journal of Cancer.
The patient
volunteers in this particular study were part of a huge and ongoing
prospective
clinical research study, the European
Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition study (EPIC study). Among the approximately
500,000 participants
in the EPIC study, 950 men who were newly diagnosed with prostate
cancer during
the course of the study and 1,042 men who had no evidence of prostate
cancer
were evaluated for this particular prostate cancer sub-study.
Isoflavones
belong to a group
of compounds referred to as phytoestrogens, which are found in certain
foods. Phytoestrogens
are substances found in
certain edible plants, and are known to have weak estrogen-like effects
(estrogen is the dominant female sex hormone).
Soybeans, and soybean-derived soy proteins, represent the
richest source
of dietary isoflavones, although some other types of beans, nuts,
fruits and
vegetables contain low concentrations of isoflavones.
Lignans are another group of natural
plant-based compounds that are considered to be phytoestrogens. Lignans
are found in flax seeds, whole wheat
flour, tea, some fruits, and other cereal grains.
In
this prostate cancer
prevention study, all of the patient volunteers had their blood tested
for
phytoestrogens at the time that they entered into the study. An especially interesting,
and important,
aspect of this study is that blood levels of isoflavones and lignans
were
tested in all of these 1,992 men,
and
before prostate cancer was diagnosed
in the 950 men who were diagnosed with this form of cancer during the
course of
this study. Additionally,
all of the
study participants completed the usual dietary and general health
surveys that
are commonly used in epidemiological studies.
Thus, this particular cancer prevention study relied not
only on
subjective and bias-prone dietary surveys, but also upon objective
measurements
of isoflavone and lignan concentrations in the blood of all of these
men.
While
prostate cancer risk
did not appear to vary with the concentration of lignans in the blood,
the concentration
of the isoflavone phytoestrogen genistein in the blood did, in fact,
correlate
with prostate cancer risk. The
results
of this study revealed that high serum concentrations of genistein were
associated with a 26 percent relative reduction in the risk of
developing
prostate cancer.
This
study builds upon a
previous Japanese study, which also measured phytoestrogen levels in
the blood,
and which reported a decrease in prostate cancer risk with high blood
levels of
genistein, although this observation, in the Japanese study, did not
quite reach
the level of statistical significance that is needed to scientifically
validate
such research findings. (The
EPIC
Study’s findings regarding genistein and prostate cancer risk did,
however,
meet this “statistically significant” threshold.)
In
summary, therefore, this
innovative prospective clinical research study identified an apparent
significant reduction in the risk of developing prostate cancer among
older men
who had high levels of the isoflavone genistein circulating in their
blood. As
phytoestrogens are absorbed in
the GI tract from plants containing high concentrations of these
compounds, and
as clinical studies based solely upon dietary surveys are notoriously
inaccurate, this particular study’s direct measurement of phytoestrogen
levels
in the blood of its patient volunteers is a critically important
innovation,
and considerably increases the likelihood that the findings of this
study are
clinically significantly.
I
will have much more to say,
dear readers, about diet and prostate cancer prevention, as well as
many other clinical
evidence-based lifestyle and dietary strategies to reduce your risk of
developing
all of the top ten cancer killers,
in
my forthcoming book, “A Cancer Prevention Guide for the Human Race,”
which
should be available in the spring of 2010.
Disclaimer:
As always, my advice to readers is to seek the
advice of your
physician
before making any
significant changes in medications, diet, or
level of physical activity
Dr. Wascher
is an oncologic surgeon, a professor
of surgery, a widely published author, and the
Physician-in-Chief for Surgical
Oncology at the Kaiser Permanente healthcare system in Orange County,
California

(Anticipated
Publication Date: March 2010)

(Click
above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)
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