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Low-fat diet tied to improved breast cancer survival odds

- LISA RAPAPORT

Breast cancer patients may have a better chance of survival when they follow a low-fat diet heavy in fruits, vegetables and whole grains, a US study suggests.

Researcher­s studied 19,541 participan­ts in the federally funded Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) who were randomly selected to join a dietary experiment focused on limiting fat intake to 20 per cent of calories. Researcher­s also looked at data for a control group of 29,294 women in the WHI study who didn’t alter their diets.

By the time the researcher­s had been tracking half the women for at least 8.5 years, 1,764 participan­ts had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

A decade after their diagnosis, 82 per cent of the breast cancer patients on the low-fat diet were still alive, compared with 78 per cent in the control group.

For women on the low-fat diet who developed breast cancer, this translated into a 22 per cent lower risk of death during the study, and these women typically didn’t succeed at reducing fat consumptio­n by the amount suggested in the diet experiment.

“Decades ago, comparison of country-to-country difference­s in fat intake found countries with higher fat intake like the U.S. and most of Western Europe had higher breast cancer mortality, but subsequent observatio­nal studies have had inconsiste­nt results,” said lead study author Dr. Rowan Chlebowski of City of Hope National Medical Center in Duarte, California.

The WHI dietary modificati­on trial is the only full-scale randomised trial addressing this issue,” Chlebowski said by email.

The main goal of the diet experiment was to get women to change their eating habits, not to count calories or lose weight.

Women assigned to change their diets had a series of group and individual counseling sessions with certified nutritioni­sts over the first year of the program, followed by group sessions four times a year for the remainder of the experiment.

After one year, women in the diet group got about 24 percent of their calories from fat compared with 35 percent fat in other participan­ts’ diets. While weight loss wasn’t a goal, women in the diet group weighted about 2.2 kilograms (4.9 pounds) less than other participan­ts.

While the diet experiment was ongoing, 671 women in the diet group and 1,093 who didn’t alter their eating habits developed breast cancer. This difference was too small to rule out the possibilit­y that it was due to chance.

But women on the low-fat diet were less likely to develop certain hard-to-treat tumours.

 ??  ?? The main goal of the diet experiment was to get women to change their eating habits, not to count calories or lose weight
The main goal of the diet experiment was to get women to change their eating habits, not to count calories or lose weight

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