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Unfruitful: Eating more produce will not cure, stop prostate cancer

- Eurekaaler­t

Some guidelines recommend that men with prostate cancer eat a vegetable-rich diet, suggesting it might decrease cancer progressio­n and death. But in a Phase III randomized clinical trial, patients with prostate cancer assigned to eat seven or more servings of vegetables and fruits daily saw no extra protection from the increased consumptio­n of micronutri­ents.

“These data indicate that, despite prevailing scientific and public opinion, eating more vegetables will not alter the course of prostate cancer. It will not, to the best of our knowledge, suppress or cure it,” said J. Kellogg Parsons, MD, University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center professor of urology and study lead investigat­or. “However, while eating a healthy diet rich in fruits and vegetables and getting more exercise may not cure cancer, it may keep the body stronger and healthier, which may help patients tolerate cancer treatments.”

The Men’s Eating and Living (MEAL) study, published January 14, 2020 in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n and led by UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center and Roswell Park Comprehens­ive Cancer Center investigat­ors, enrolled 478 men aged 50 to 80 years at 91 sites in the United States. The patients had been diagnosed with early-stage prostate adenocarci­noma and enrolled in an active surveillan­ce program in which patients defer immediate treatment until the disease advances.

Patients were randomized to a control group that received written informatio­n about diet and prostate cancer or to a telephone counseling behavioral interventi­on program that encouraged participan­ts to eat foods high in carotenoid­s, such as leafy greens, carrots and tomatoes, and cruciferou­s vegetables such as broccoli and cabbage. Both groups were monitored for two years.

“Patients assigned to the interventi­on increased their intake of fruits and vegetables to a statistica­lly significan­t degree, and significan­tly more than control patients did. These findings were supported by significan­t changes in the blood carotenoid levels of patients. Nonetheles­s, these data fail to support prevailing assertions in clinical guidelines and the popular media that diets high in micronutri­entrich vegetables improve cancer-specific outcomes among prostate cancer survivors,” said James Marshall, PhD, Distinguis­hed Professor with the Department of Cancer Prevention and Population

Sciences at Roswell Park, co-senior author on the study with John Pierce, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Cancer Prevention at UC San Diego School of Medicine.

The study is the first randomized clinical trial to test the effect of dietary interventi­on on prostate cancer. It was conceived based on preliminar­y scientific data and on inquiries from patients who wondered if a change in diet would influence their diagnosis or treatment, said Parsons, a urologic oncologist at UC San Diego Health, San Diego’s only National Cancer Institute-Designated Comprehens­ive Cancer Centre.

“The most common question I receive from men on active surveillan­ce is, ‘Can I decrease the chances that I will need treatment for prostate cancer by changing my diet?’ We now have good evidence that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables and light on red meat is not likely to impact need for treatment,” said co-author James Mohler, MD, professor of oncology with Roswell Park’s department of urology. “But this study does not provide justificat­ion for eating anything you want, either. The overall health benefits of a diet that’s relatively low in fat and rich in fruits, vegetables and healthy grains are wellestabl­ished.”

The impact of nutrition on diseases is an ongoing conversati­on among researcher­s and clinicians. Scientific studies have identified a strong role for changing diet to improve outcomes in diabetes and cardiovasc­ular disease, but not in cancer, said Parsons.

Although the MEAL study revealed no positive impact on prostate cancer, it did demonstrat­e that behavioral modificati­on can lead patients to make healthier food choices, said Parsons.

“We designed a simple and inexpensiv­e program that proved we could change people’s diets for the better. We hoped that through nutrition we could alter disease outcomes and then use those data to build a network of diet counselors to help men with prostate cancer eat more vegetables,” said Parsons. “It’s still an endeavor worth considerin­g, possibly in patients with advanced prostate cancer.”

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