Irish Daily Mail

Is olive oil a lifesaver?

Mediterran­ean diet rich in extra virgin oil ‘can cut breast risk by almost 70pc’

- By Ben Spencer

WOMEN who eat a diet packed with fish, vegetables and olive oil could more than halve their risk of getting breast cancer, research has suggested.

Compared to eating a low-fat diet, following a Mediterran­eanstyle menu rich in certain fats cuts the chance of developing the disease by 68 per cent, a study found.

Some 2,816 Irish women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year, and 689 a year die from the disease. It is the most common non-invasive form of cancer and the secondbigg­est killer.

Age is the biggest risk factor for breast cancer, with the chance of developing it increasing significan­tly among older women.

But scientists know diet and lifestyle also play a major role, and they have made huge efforts in recent years to isolate the different contributi­ng factors.

Many experts believe that a lowfat diet reduces the chance of breast cancer, because of the role that fat cells play in producing oestrogen, which is thought to fuel the disease. But the new study suggests certain types of fat can actually play a protective role.

The Mediterran­ean diet is heavy in the mono-unsaturate­d fat found in extra virgin olive oil and the omega3 fatty acids found in fish. Compared to a low-fat diet, the study suggests these fats actually lower breast cancer risk.

The researcher­s, whose findings are published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, tracked 4,282 Spanish women for five years.

One group followed a low-fat diet, a second group followed a Mediterran­ean diet with an extra 30g a day of nuts, and a third followed a Medi- terranean diet with an extra litre a week of extra virgin olive oil.

Over the five years, the group which had the extra virgin olive oil were 68 per cent less likely to develop breast cancer than on a low-fat diet. The nut-supplement­ed menu made no significan­t difference.

The researcher­s, led by the University of Navarra in Pamplona, Spain, said the trial suggested a beneficial effect of a Mediterran­ean diet supplement­ed with extra virgin olive oil in the primary prevention of breast cancer. But they warned the results needed confirmati­on with longerterm studies.

Separate research, published in the British Journal Of Cancer last year, found women who follow a Mediterran­ean diet also lower their risk of womb cancer by 57 per cent.

Experts said more research is needed before a specific diet could be recommende­d. Dr Mitchell Katz, deputy editor of JAMA Internal Medicine, pointed out that only 35 cases of breast cancer were seen during the study.

Katie Goates, of charity Breast Cancer Now, said: ‘Although these results raise an interestin­g question about the role of the Mediterran­ean diet and olive oil in reducing breast cancer risk, they don’t add anything more concrete to our understand­ing of diet and breast cancer.

‘We already know that maintainin­g a healthy diet might help to reduce your risk of breast cancer, but without more evidence about the role of specific foods on breast cancer risk, clearer guidelines are some way off.’

Samia al Qadhi, of Breast Cancer Care, added: ‘ It’s i mportant to remember that lifestyle changes can’t prevent breast cancer completely… Being female and getting older – 80 per cent diagnosed are over 50 – remain the most significan­t risks for developing the disease.’

‘Age is the most significan­t risk’

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