Calorie Restriction and Colon Cancer
Our diet is a key factor in keeping gut and colon cancer at bay, and preliminary
studies in mice have suggested that the best diet to counter cancer is to eat
in healthier and smaller food portions.
Investigators
at the US National Cancer Institute, in Bethesda, Maryland found that cancer-prone
mice which were fed either a restricted-calorie
diet or a diet rich in olive oil, fruits and vegetables were up to 60% less
likely to develop pre-cancerous colon polyps compared with mice fed regular
diets. As such, the lead researcher Dr. Volker Mai has advised individuals
who want to prevent intestinal and colon cancers to "avoid
overeating and consume a healthier diet rich in beneficial fatty acids (and)
high in fruits and vegetables".
Dr.
Mai's study placed mice on 5 different variables. These mice were specially
bred with a gene that left them highly susceptible to intestinal cancers. The
mice were then put on one of five diets - a regular diet, a regular diet plus
moderate exercise, a high-fat diet, a calorie-restricted (40% less)
diet, or a diet high in olive oil, fruits and vegetables.
Each mouse's gut was then examined for the number of polyps -- small pre-cancerous
growths -- at the end of the study. The results demonstrated how significantly
the diet affects the rate of cancer growth. The mice on the olive oil, fruit
and vegetable regimen displayed 40% fewer polyps within the intestines and colon,
and there was a full 60% less polyp development among the mice on the calorie-restricted
diet. The mice who had exercised had a slight reduction in polyp development,
whereas the most cancer-prone mice were those on the high-fat regimens.
Many
studies have concluded that simply by reducing daily calorie intake is helpful
in keeping cancer away, and it is almost universally accepted that
diets heavy in fruits, vegetables and healthy oils work to fight a host of illnesses.
While we cannot say with certainty that the same results apply to men as they
do in mice, strong similarities do exist between us. Although the mechanisms
by which various foods affect health remain unclear, it is likely low-calorie,
plant-based diets may alter levels of hormones in the body that influence cancer
development.
Annual Experimental Biology 2002 Conference New Orleans, LA April 22, 2002