Higher consumption of plant foods such as soy products that are rich in phytoestrogens is linked with reduced risk for lung cancer
Higher consumption of plant foods that are
rich in phytoestrogens is linked with reduced risk for lung cancer,
according to an article in the September 28 issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association. Foods rich in phytoestrogens
include soy beans, grains, carrots, broccoli, and other fruits and
vegetables.
The three main classes of phytoestrogens are isoflavones, lignans,
and cumestrans. A fourth group of plant-derived steroidal compounds
believed to have estrogenic properties are the phytosterols. Phytoestrogens
have been shown to have a protective effect against some solid tumors,
but there has been little epidemiologic research focused on dietary
intake of phytoestrogens and lung cancer risk.
Matthew B. Schabath, PhD, and colleagues at the University of Texas
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, analyzed data from an ongoing
case-control study to examine the relationship between dietary intake
of phytoestrogens and the risk of lung cancer.
The study included 1,674 patients with lung cancer and 1,735 matched
healthy controls. From July 1995 through October 2003, study participants
were personally interviewed to obtain information on demographics,
socioeconomics, and smoking history. Women were asked whether they
had taken hormone therapy in the previous six months. A food frequency
questionnaire was used to collect dietary data on intake of 12 individual
phytoestrogens.
"Our main findings were that patients with lung cancer tended
to consume lower amounts of phytoestrogens than controls, that there
were sex-specific differences both in intake and in protective effects,
and that the apparent benefits were evident in both never and current
smokers but less so in former smokers," the authors reported.
Reduction in lung cancer risk tended to increase with increasing
phytoestrogen intake. "The highest quartiles of total phytosterols,
isoflavones, lignans, and phytoestrogens were each associated with
reductions in risk of lung cancer ranging from 21 percent for phytosterols
to 46 percent for total phytoestrogens from food sources only,"
the authors wrote.
Sex-specific effects were also apparent. "For men, statistically
significant trends for decreasing risk with increasing intake were
noted for each phytoestrogen group, with protective effects for
the highest quartile of intake ranging from 24 percent for phytosterols
to 44 percent for isoflavones, while in women, significant trends
were only present for intake of total phytoestrogens from food sources
only, with a 34 percent protective effect for the highest quartile
of intake," the authors reported.
The apparent benefits of high phytoestrogen intake were evident
in both current smokers and those who had never smoked, but less
apparent in former smokers.
In women, statistically significant joint effects were evident
between hormone therapy use and phytoestrogen intake. "Specifically,
high intake of the lignans [metabolites] enterolactone and enterodiol
and use of hormone therapy were associated with a 50 percent reduction
in risk of lung cancer," the authors reported.
"In summary, these data provide further support for the limited
but growing epidemiologic evidence that estrogens and phytoestrogens
are associated with a decrease in risk of lung cancer, especially
in never and current smokers," they concluded. "However,
confirmation of these findings is still required in large-scale
longitudinal studies."
In an accompanying editorial, Lawrence J. Dacey, MD, MS, and David
W. Johnstone, MD, of Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon,
N.H., urged physicians and other health professionals to talk with
their patients about the importance of diet in cancer prevention.
". patients should be informed that they may further reduce
their risk of developing cancer by adopting a diet rich in fruits
and vegetables," they wrote. "Clinicians who actively
and aggressively educate their patients and follow up on their efforts
to modify their cancer risks will help lessen the great personal
suffering and societal burden inflicted by lung cancer."
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