By HEALTHDAY May 18, 2017, 5:46 PM
Colon cancer patients might improve their chances of
survival if they eat nuts
along with an overall healthy diet and
regular exercise, two new studies report.
In a seven-year study, patients successfully treated for stage 3
colon cancer who ate at least 2 ounces of nuts a week had a 42 percent lower
chance of their cancer coming back and a 57 percent lower risk of dying from
the disease.
Stage 3 means the cancer may have spread to surrounding tissues,
but hasn't spread to distant organs.
These preliminary findings jibe with those of a second trial.
That study found that colon cancer
survivors with the
highest healthy lifestyle scores -- eating right, exercising and maintaining a
healthy weight -- had a 42 percent lower risk of death than those with the
lowest scores.
Both studies are scheduled for presentation next month at the
annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), in Chicago.
"Diet and lifestyle can influence both the risk of cancer
coming back and can help you
live longer," said ASCO President-Elect Dr. Bruce
Johnson. He's chief clinical research officer at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
in Boston.
"Once you get cancer, it's not too late to adopt
these," Johnson continued. "It makes a difference. A third of our cancer risk
is related to things we can prevent."
The nut study was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of
Health. It involved more than 800 patients who had received surgery and
chemotherapy for their colon cancer. They all filled out diet questionnaires,
including questions regarding the amount of nuts they ate. The patients were
followed for about seven years after completing chemotherapy.
Nearly 1 in 5 patients (19 percent) said they ate at least 2
ounces of nuts a week, and researchers found both a lower risk of cancer
recurrence and higher overall survival in that group.
However, this benefit was limited to tree nuts such as Brazil
nuts, cashews, pecans, walnuts and pistachios, said lead researcher Dr.
Temidayo Fadelu, a clinical fellow at Dana-Farber. Further analysis revealed
that peanuts and peanut butter did not provide any benefit.
Peanuts actually fall within the legume category and are cousin
to well-known legumes such as peas, beans and lentils, Fadelu noted.
"This difference [in benefit] may be due to the different
biochemical composition between peanuts and tree nuts," Fadelu said.
Fadelu and his colleagues think that people who eat tree nuts
might have lower blood sugar and lower levels of insulin, which could decrease
their colon cancer risk.
Tree nuts contain high amounts of healthy fatty acids, fiber and
flavonoids. "The thought is those impact the way the body releases
insulin," Fadelu said, noting other studies have linked nut consumption to
healthier blood sugar and insulin levels.
The second study also focused on stage 3 colon cancer patients
after chemotherapy. Researchers surveyed almost 1,000 patients about their
lifestyles, scoring them against recommendations in the American
Cancer Society's Nutrition and Physical Activity Guidelines for Cancer
Survivors.
Half were followed up to seven years, and half longer.
People who stuck closely to the guidelines regarding exercise,
diet and excess weight had a 42 percent lower risk of death than those who
didn't, said lead researcher Erin Van Blarigan. She's an assistant professor of
epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco.
The numbers improved even more if patients also moderated their alcohol
consumption, researchers found.
When drinking was included in the analysis, people strictly
following ACS lifestyle guidelines had a 51 percent lower chance of dying and a
36 percent lower chance of cancer recurrence.
Patients should not read these studies and assume that they can
avoid chemotherapy and instead treat their colon cancer with diet and exercise,
warned ASCO President Dr. Daniel Hayes.
"That's a very dangerous interpretation, and that's not
what we're trying to get across," said Hayes, who is clinical director of
breast oncology at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.
"Chemotherapy clearly saves lives."
While these studies can't prove a clear cause-and-effect
relationship, Hayes noted both focused on patients involved in clinical trials
for chemotherapy drugs.
Using clinical trial patients takes out a lot of the biases
found in typical observational studies and "makes these findings even more
compelling, in my opinion," Hayes said.
Data and conclusions presented at meetings should be considered
preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.
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