by Robert Reames 11.01.2007
A report released Wednesday by the American
Institute for Cancer Research offers recommendations to help prevent
cancer, including staying lean and getting exercise daily.
Weight management, exercise and proper nutrition are key to reducing
your risk of cancer. And the earlier in life you adopt these practices,
the better off you'll be, a new study suggests.
Factors such as birth weight, childbearing, breast-feeding, and adult
height and weight also influence cancer risk, according to the report
released Wednesday by the American Institute for Cancer Research and
the Britain-based World Cancer Research Fund. Understanding how these
factors affect cancer risk, and how to put this information to use
to prevent the disease, offer promising new directions for cancer
research, the study authors said.
"We need to think about cancer as the product of many long-term influences,
not as something that 'just happens,' " Dr. Walter J. Willett said
in a prepared statement. Willett, a professor of epidemiology and
nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, was one of 21 authors
of the report, Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity, and the Prevention
of Cancer: A Global Perspective.
"Examining the causes of cancer this way, across the entire lifetime,
is called the life course approach," he added.
The report, an analysis by scientists from around the world of more
than 7,000 studies, offers 10 recommendations to help prevent cancer.
They include staying lean, getting at least 30 minutes of exercise
daily, limiting your intake of red meat and alcohol, and avoiding
processed meats.
"These findings are right on," said Colleen Doyle, director of nutrition
and physical activity at the American Cancer Society. "They are consistent
with our own nutrition and physical activity guidelines. They clearly
put the emphasis where the emphasis needs to be, and that's on controlling
your weight."
"This is a good-news report," added Karen Collins, a nutrition adviser
at the American Institute for Cancer Research. "If we are watching
our weight, working regular physical activity into our daily life
and eating a healthy balance of foods, we could prevent a third of
cancers," she said. "Extra weight is not dead weight," she said. "It's
an active metabolic tissue that produces substances that promote the
development of cancer."
"People should take this message to be empowering," Collins said.
The analysis of the studies found a definite link between excess fat
and cancers of the esophagus, pancreas, colon and rectum, endometrium,
kidney as well as breast cancer in postmenopausal women.
The risk from excess weight begins at birth, according to the report.
The reason for the link between birth weight and breast cancer has
to do with body fat. Excess body fat influences the body's hormones,
and these changes can make it more likely for cells to undergo the
kind of abnormal growth that leads to cancer, the researchers said.
In addition, overweight girls can start menstruating at an earlier
age. So, over their lifetime, they will have more menstrual cycles.
This extended exposure to estrogen is associated with increased risk
for premenopausal breast cancer, the report found.
Not smoking is the most important thing one can do to reduce the risk
of cancer, Doyle said. But, she added, "there are estimates that obesity
will overtake smoking as the leading preventable cause of death.
"It's great to see another report that emphasizes being active, watching
your weight and eating a healthy diet are not only going to help you
reduce your risk of cancer but heart disease and diabetes as well,"
Doyle said.
The report also found that breast-feeding can lower a mother's risk
for developing breast cancer. In addition, breast-fed infants have
a lower risk of becoming overweight or obese, and this means a lower
risk of developing cancer.
"The evidence is uniformly strong on breast-feeding, and the fact
that it offers cancer protection to both mothers and their children
is why we made breast-feeding one of our 10 Recommendations to Prevent
Cancer," Willett said.
In addition, tall people seem to have a higher risk of colorectal
and postmenopausal breast cancer, according to the report.
"We found that tallness is also probably linked to increased risk
for ovarian, pancreatic and premenopausal cancer as well," Willett
said. Although the association between height and cancer is convincing,
tall people are not destined to get cancer, he added.
Willett noted that being at increased risk is not a guarantee that
you are going to develop cancer. "Risk isn't fate," he said. "The
evidence clearly shows that risk can be changed.
"We wanted to point these emerging links out, because we now believe
them to be more important than the scientific community, much less
the public, has yet realized," Willett added. "Whether or not we get
cancer has to do with our genes and with the choices we make everyday.
Our cancer risk is also influenced by our whole accumulated life experience,
from conception onwards."
Body weight and composition is a big factor, one expert said.
"This report really reinforces the connection between being overweight
or obese and the increased risk of many, if not all, cancers," said
Carolyn Lammersfeld, the national director of nutrition at Cancer
Treatment Centers of America. "The majority of Americans are not aware
of that connection. They are more concerned with pesticides and environmental
contaminants, but obesity is a much greater risk factor," she said.
But risks can be minimized, she added. "If you don't have cancer,
it's never too late to try to do what you can to lower your risk,"
Lammersfeld said. "In addition, cancer survivors should follow the
diet and weight recommendations to prevent a return of cancer." The
report said that people should not use dietary supplements to try
to offset cancer risk -- something Lammersfeld agreed with. "You can't
fix a crappy diet with supplements," she said.
Written by Steven Reinberg, HealthDay Reporter
Originally published by HealthDay News
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