July 17, 2007

Veggie Overload No Help For Breast Cancer

Study On Survivors Shows No Benefit To Eating More Then Recommended Servings Of Fruits And Vegetables

  •  (AP)

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(WebMD)  Healthy diet and exercise may help women survive breast cancer, but eating more than five daily servings of fruits and vegetables doesn't offer extra benefit.

The disappointing finding comes from a seven-year study of more than 3,000 women successfully treated for early breast cancer.

University of California, San Diego cancer researcher John P. Pierce, Ph.D., and colleagues urged half the women to eat the "5-A-Day" servings of fruits and vegetables recommended by the National Cancer Institute. The other half of the women underwent intensive training to get them to eat even more of these healthy foods.

"We got people up to 12 servings of fruits and vegetables a day," Pierce tells WebMD. "So how extreme do you need to go? If you take five servings a day, do you need to go over the top? The answer is no. But this doesn't mean you should not eat your 5-A-Day."

After trying to follow their diets for more than seven years, 17% of the women in each group saw their cancer return, and 10% in each group died.

Pierce and colleagues report their findings in the July 18 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association. An editorial by Susan M. Gapstur, Ph.D., associate director for cancer prevention and control at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, Chicago, accompanies the study.

Gapstur and Pierce agree that the study showed no added breast cancer survival benefit from adding extra servings of fruits and vegetables.

Gapstur notes that while the women seemed to eat a lot of healthy foods, they also ate more fats than they were supposed to.

"While it did appear the fruit and vegetable intake increased, clearly the self-reported total diet and fat intake didn't achieve its goal," Gapstur tells WebMD. "The dietary fat intake did not improve. In fact, the women seemed to be eating a higher quantity of fat at the end of the study than they were at the start."

Pierce points to an earlier report on these women in the June 10 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. That study found that regardless of whether they were obese, breast cancer survivors who followed the 5-A-Day diet — and exercised about 30 minutes a day — had significantly improved cancer-free survival.

"Eat five servings of fruits and vegetables and exercise daily; those are the things that matter for breast cancer survival," Pierce says.

Gapstur agrees that's good advice.

"If I were a breast cancer survivor, I would want to know more about the benefits of energy balance and exercise," she says. "It is really not about consuming two more servings of vegetables every day. It is about changing my lifestyle so I can live a healthier and longer life."


  • If you're in the early stages of breast cancer and need support, you can find other women like you on WebMD's Breast Cancer: Friend to Friend message board .




    By Daniel DeNoon
    Reviewed by Brunilda Nazario, M.D.
    © 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
    Add a Comment
    by lmeg85 July 20, 2007 12:34 PM EDT
    There's a typo in your subhead.
    Reply to this comment
    by vermonter52 July 18, 2007 5:40 PM EDT
    Read the "The China Study" by T.Colin Campbell regarding nutrition and disease. Most likely none of the women in this study gave up dairy products and meat. The world continues to refuse to lay blame to our high dairy and meat diet for many of our diseases, including cancer. Read the book and facts that prove that all dairy products and protein from meat are one of the major underlying causes of cancer. The U.S.consumes the most of it and has the highest cancer rate compared to other countries.
    Reply to this comment
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