CHICAGO - Hopes that a diet low in fat and chock-full of fruits and
vegetables could prevent the return of breast cancer were dashed Tuesday by a
large, seven-year experiment in more than 3,000 women.
A woman enquires the costs of fruits from a vendor at a
roadside shop in Mumbai in this December 24, 2006 file photo.
[Reuters]
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The government study found no benefit from a mega-veggies-and-fruit diet over
the US recommended servings of five fruits and vegetables a day - more than most
Americans get.
Researchers noted that none of the breast cancer survivors lost weight on
either diet. That led some experts to suggest that weight loss and exercise
should be the next frontier for cancer prevention research. The study appears in
Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
"It sends us back to the drawing board," said Susan Gapstur of Northwestern
University's Feinberg School of Medicine, who wasn't involved in the new study
but co-wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal.
"Should we really have focused on dietary components like fruits, vegetables
and fat?" Gapstur asked. "Or should we be focusing, in addition to diet, on
lifestyle factors including physical activity and weight?"
For now, the message for the 2.4 million breast cancer survivors in the
United States is that they don't need to go overboard on veggies, researchers
said.
"This should really lift some of the guilt if women are feeling, 'I'm just
not doing enough,'" said study co-author Marcia Stefanick of Stanford
University.
The research was kicked off by a $5 million grant from the late Wal-Mart heir
John Walton and got an additional $30 million in support from the National
Cancer Institute.
Walton wanted to support a scientific study so cancer survivors wouldn't have
to "rely on folklore," said John Pierce, head of cancer prevention at University
of California, San Diego, who led the research.
Earlier research on whether a healthy diet prevents breast cancer has shown
mixed results. The new study was designed to be more rigorous.
In this experiment, all the women had been successfully treated for early
stage breast cancer. Their average age was 53 when the study began.
A group of 1,537 women were randomly assigned to a daily diet that included
five vegetable servings, three fruit servings, 16 ounces of vegetable juice and
30 grams of fiber. In most cases, a serving equaled a half-cup. French fries and
iceberg lettuce couldn't be counted as vegetables.
The women were allowed to eat meat, but were told to get no more than 15
percent to 20 percent of their calories from fat, a goal they ultimately were
unable to achieve.
"That's a tough diet," said Pierce, who ate that way himself along with his
staff and the women in the study.
As a comparison, another 1,551 women were assigned to get educational
materials about the importance of eating five servings of fruits and vegetables
a day.
The women in both groups kept food diaries regularly, but not daily, through
the course of the study.
During the next seven years, the cancer returned in about the same proportion
of women in both groups: 256 women (16.7 percent) of the women on the special
diet and 262 women (16.9 percent) in the comparison group. About 10 percent of
both groups died during that time, most of them from breast cancer.
It didn't matter whether the breast cancer was the most common type - fueled
by hormones - or not; the special diet didn't prevent the cancer from coming
back. Those results run counter to a previous study by different researchers
that suggested low-fat diets may help prevent the return of the type of breast
cancer that is not linked to hormones.
In the mega-veggies group, the women changed their eating habits
substantially, mostly by increasing fruits and vegetables to as much as 11
servings a day. They failed to meet the fat target, but did eat 13 percent less
in fat calories than did the comparison group.
After one year, women on the high-vegetable diet had 73 percent higher blood
levels of carotenoids (pigments found in fruits and vegetables) than the other
women. That indicates they were truthful about how many fruits and vegetables
they ate, Pierce said.
But they may not have been so honest about the calories they ate. The
super-veggie group gained 1.3 pounds and the comparison group gained 0.88 pound,
on average.
"There's no question they were underreporting on calories, especially the
heavier women," Pierce said, or they would have lost weight.