Veel groenten en fruit tegen tegen pancreas kanker.*
Uit een grootschailge Amerikaanse studie blijkt dat vooral veel groenten en ook fruit het risico op pancreas kanker wel tot 50% doet afnemen. Kanker aan de pancreas is moeilijk vast te stellen en te genezen. De belangrijkste groenten zijn: uien, knoflook, bonen, gele groente (zoals wortelen, pompoenen, maïs en zoete aardappel), donkere bladgroenten en kruisbloemigen (zoals kolen, spruiten, radiijs en broccoli). Fruit heeft wat minder effect waarbij citrusfruit het meeste heeft.
High-vegetable
Diet Linked To Protection Against Pancreatic Cancer
In
one of the largest studies of its kind, UCSF researchers have found that eating
lots of fruits and vegetables -- particularly vegetables -- is associated with
about a 50 percent reduction in the risk of developing pancreatic cancer.
Pancreatic cancer is difficult to diagnose and remains largely untreatable. It
kills about 30,000 people in the U.S. each year and has a five-year survival
under four percent.
The
vegetables most strongly associated with increased protection were onions,
garlic, beans, yellow vegetables (such as carrots, yams, sweet potatoes, corn
and yellow squash), dark leafy vegetables and cruciferous vegetables.
Light-green vegetables, tomatoes and tomato products showed weaker protective
benefits.
Fruits were found to be protective but significantly
less so than vegetables, with citrus fruits and citrus juices
most protective.
The
50 percent reduced risk was associated with eating at last five servings per day
of the protective vegetables or vegetables and fruit, compared to those who ate
two servings a day or less. And eating nine servings per day of vegetables and
fruit combined also was associated with about a 50 percent reduced pancreatic
cancer risk compared with eating less than five servings per day. A serving is
considered to be about a half cup of cooked vegetables, two cups of leafy salad
or one medium-sized piece of fruit.
The
study was based on in-person interviews of 2,233 San Francisco Bay Area
residents: 532 pancreatic cancer patients and more than 1,700 randomly selected
"controls." Control group participants did not have pancreatic cancer
but were of a similar age distribution and similar male to female ratio as the
pancreatic cancer patients. Participants were asked about their fruit and
vegetable consumption for the one-year period prior to the interview, as well as
other questions about diet, smoking, occupation and other factors.
The
study findings regarding fruit and vegetable consumption are being published in
the September issue of the journal Cancer, Epidemiology, Biomarkers and
Prevention. "Pancreatic cancer is not nearly as common as breast or lung
cancer, but its diagnosis and treatment are particularly difficult," said
Elizabeth A. Holly, PhD, UCSF professor of epidemiology and biostatistics and
senior author of the study. "Finding strong confirmation that simple life
choices can provide significant protection from pancreatic cancer may be one of
the most practical ways to reduce the incidence of this dreadful disease."
The
results are considered particularly meaningful because of the study's size, the
quantitative nature of the food questionnaire and the statistical significance
of the findings, according to the study team. The likelihood that chance alone
accounts for the discovered correlations between diet and cancer is less than
one in a thousand for many vegetable categories, and well within the limits
considered statistically significant for most of the vegetables studied, the
scientists reported.
The
findings don't necessarily mean that all fruits and vegetables -- or any
specific ones -- are potentially helpful or harmful, the authors point out. For
example, they found evidence that the way foods are prepared may play a role:
raw vegetables appear to be somewhat more protective than cooked vegetables, and
fried potatoes appear to be more harmful than those prepared other ways. In
addition, a specific food could be a "proxy" for another food that is
often eaten with it, such as meat eaten with fried potatoes, for a hypothetical
example. California physicians are required by law to report all cancer cases to
a statewide records center, which allowed the researchers to identify all
pancreatic cancer patients treated within a five-year period in six Bay Areas
counties: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara.
The
research approach used by the UCSF team is called a "case-control"
study because it involves a comparison of pancreatic cancer cases with a control
group without pancreatic cancer. The main limitation of this approach is that
many of the cancer patients identified at the outset die before they can be
interviewed, as was the case with the UCSF study, the researchers reported.
Still,
the alternative research approach -- a "prospective" study that
inquires about diet and then follows people long enough to determine which of
them contracts the disease -- is less feasible because it requires a very large
sample size and a very long follow-up period, since pancreatic cancer is
relatively rare, Holly said.
The
authors note that a few prospective cohort studies have published results
looking at fruit and vegetable consumption in relation to pancreatic cancer
risk, and have observed no association or possibly a slight suggestion of
benefit. This may be due, in part, to the reduced number of cancer cases
available in such a study design, Holly suggested.
"With
more follow-up, such studies will be able to examine this question more
rigorously," said June M. Chan, ScD, assistant professor of epidemiology
and biostatistics at UCSF and lead author of the paper. "In the meantime,
results from case-control studies like this one provide support for the
hypothesis that vegetables and fruit provide some benefit in protecting against
the development of pancreatic cancer."
The
researchers previously reported on other findings from this in-person
interview-based study, namely: allergies, obesity, clinical symptoms of
pancreatic cancer and environmental factors in relation to pancreatic cancer;
also, genetic factors in relation to pancreatic cancer and cigarette use. Other
factors still to be examined in this study are the relationship between
pancreatic cancer an alcohol, detailed analyses on cigarette use, diet, other
diseases and conditions.
We conducted a population-based case-control study to investigate the association between vegetables and fruits and pancreatic cancer. Between 1995 and 1999, 532 cases and 1,701 age- and sex-matched controls completed direct interviews using a semiquantitative food-frequency questionnaire. No proxy interviews were conducted. We observed inverse associations between consumption of total and specific vegetables and fruits and the risk of pancreatic cancer. The odds ratio and 95% confidence interval for the highest versus the lowest quartile of total vegetable intake was 0.45 (0.32-0.62), trend P < 0.0001; and for total fruits and fruit juice was 0.72 (0.54-0.98), trend P = 0.06. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the highest versus the lowest quartile of specific vegetables and fruits were: 0.63 (0.47-0.83) for dark leafy vegetables, 0.76 (0.56-1.0) for cruciferous vegetables, 0.59 (0.43-0.81) for yellow vegetables, 0.56 (0.41-0.76) for carrots, 0.51 (0.38-0.70) for beans, 0.46 (0.33-0.63) for onions and garlic, and 0.78 (0.58-1.0) for citrus fruits and juice. Compared with less than five servings per day of total vegetables and fruits combined, the risk of pancreatic cancer was 0.49 (0.36-0.68) for more than nine servings per day. ( Okt. 2005)