More Fruits and Vegetables Do Not Prevent Breast Cancer Reoccurrence, Study Says
A Reduced Fat Diet Shows Early Promise, According to 2 Study Comparison
By Anne Chekal, published Jul 19, 2007
Published Content: 135 Total Views: 50,248 Favorited By: 12 CPs
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A diet rich in fruits and vegetables probably will not prevent a breast cancer recurrence. At least that is what the latest research found in a study released in the July 17 issue of the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA). This recent study - the Women's Healthy Eating and Living (WHEL) Study - followed 3,088 women who had had a breast cancer diagnosis and treatment within the previous four years. The randomized comparison study followed women over the course of 7 years and found no discernable difference in breast cancer reoccurrence between the women on a high fruit and vegetable diet, and those following the USDA recommended 5-a-Day diet.
Conflicting Results
The intervention group ate a diet of at least 3 fruit servings, 5 vegetable servings, and 30 grams of fiber each day, with a reduced fat intake of 15-20 percent of total calories. Both diets have more fruits and vegetables than the average American woman eats on a daily basis. The breast cancer reoccurrence rate was 16.7 percent among women on high fruit and vegetable diet and 16.9 percent among women in the control group, with approximately 10 percent of women who died from breast cancer during the study. Additionally, neither group of women showed weight loss as a result of the eating plan.
Previous research results have been mixed as to the preventative factors of fruits and vegetables for women in breast cancer remission. The results released in 2006 from the Women's Intervention Nutrition Study (WINS) showed significant health benefits among women following a low-fat diet versus those in a control group.
The WINS study followed 2,437 women within one year of early-stage breast cancer diagnosis. This study was more focused on early-stage breast cancer survivors, and found the beneficial effect of a low-fat diet may be isolated to women with "estrogen and progesterone receptor-negative breast cancers." Why the effect is limited to these types of cancers is still being researched. Regardless, the low-fat diet showed results in lower reoccurrence rates at both the 5-year and 8-year follow up.
Self-Reported Food Intake

More Fruits and Vegetables Do Not Prevent Breast Cancer Reoccurrence, Study Says
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