Study
Suggests Western Diet tied to Prostate Cancer
There has been much speculation that the Western diet is a
factor because when Japanese men move to the
"Within one generation, the prostate cancer incidence
begins skyrocketing," said study author Dr. Leonard S. Marks, a clinical
associate professor of urology at the
In a new study released Monday at a meeting of the American
Urological Association in
Half of the men lived in
But there were marked differences in what they ate.
The Japanese-American men reported eating a diet
substantially higher in animal fat. Not surprisingly, they also had a greater
percentage of body fat and higher triglyceride levels in their blood.
The native Japanese men ate more soy than the
Japanese-American men. Soy has been thought to possibly offer protection
against prostate cancer.
"Soy didn't protect these men," Marks said,
"but soy may be protecting many other men who don't get prostate cancer in
While the prostate cancer samples from the two groups appeared
similar, detailed analysis of the tumor cells' genetic material told another
story. "Since the DNA was arranged differently, there may be a
gene-nutrient interaction responsible for the differences," Marks said.
"The cancers look the same but their genesis appears
to be different, and that may be a result of diet," he told Reuters
Health.
Still, much more research is needed to explain why prostate
cancer rates vary widely around the world. "Does this study prove why the
differences are there? It doesn't," Marks said. "It's a first
step."