PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Men with prostate cancer should eat healthy vegetable fats

UC San Francisco-led study finds consuming olive oil and nuts may improve survival

2013-06-11
(Press-News.org) Men with prostate cancer may significantly improve their survival chances with a simple change in their diet, a new study led by UC San Francisco has found.

By substituting healthy vegetable fats – such as olive and canola oils, nuts, seeds and avocados – for animal fats and carbohydrates, men with the disease had a markedly lower risk of developing lethal prostate cancer and dying from other causes, according to the study.

The research, involving nearly 4,600 men with non-metastatic prostate cancer, could help with the development of dietary guidelines for men with the disease. While prostate cancer affects millions of men around the world, little is known about the relationship between patients' diets following their diagnosis and progression of the disease.

The study will be published online on Monday, June 10, 2013, in JAMA Internal Medicine.

"Consumption of healthy oils and nuts increases plasma antioxidants and reduces insulin and inflammation, which may deter prostate cancer progression," said lead author Erin L. Richman, ScD, a post-doctoral scholar in the UCSF Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics.

"The beneficial effects of unsaturated fats and harmful effects of saturated and trans fats on cardiovascular health are well known," Richman said. "Now our research has shown additional potential benefits of consuming unsaturated fats among men with prostate cancer."

Nearly 2.5 million men in the United States currently live with prostate cancer and another quarter-million men are expected to be diagnosed this year. One in six men in the U.S. will be diagnosed with the disease during their lifetime.

In recent years, evidence has indicated that diet might be an important way for men with prostate cancer to take an active role in determining their disease outcome and overall health. Research on advanced prostate cancer has suggested that fat intake may be relevant to disease progression, but this is the first study to examine fat consumption post-diagnosis in relation to risk of lethal prostate cancer and overall survival.

The new paper analyzed intake of saturated, monounsaturated, polyunsaturated and trans fats as well as fats from animal and vegetable sources.

The data were derived from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, which began in 1986 and is sponsored by the Harvard School of Public Health and is funded by the National Cancer Institute.

The fat intake study involved 4,577 men who had been diagnosed with non-metastatic prostate cancer between 1986 and 2010. During the study timeframe, 1,064 men died, primarily from cardiovascular disease (31 percent), prostate cancer (21 percent) and other cancers (nearly 21 percent).

The authors uncovered a striking benefit: Men who replaced 10 percent of their total daily calories from carbohydrates with healthy vegetable fats had a 29 percent lower risk of developing lethal prostate cancer and a 26 percent lower risk of dying from all causes.

Adding a single serving of oil-based dressing a day (one tablespoon) was associated with a 29 percent lower risk of lethal prostate cancer and a 13 percent lower risk of death, the authors found. And adding one serving of nuts a day (one ounce) was associated with an 18 percent lower risk of lethal prostate cancer and an 11 percent lower risk of death.

The study adjusted for factors such as age, types of medical treatment, body mass index, smoking, exercise and other dietary factors, elevated blood pressure, cholesterol at the time of prostate cancer diagnosis and other health conditions. The researchers say further research is needed on the potential benefits of healthy fats among prostate cancer patients.

"Overall, our findings support counseling men with prostate cancer to follow a heart-healthy diet in which carbohydrate calories are replaced with unsaturated oils and nuts to reduce the risk of all-cause mortality," said Erin Richman, the first author.

###

The senior author is June M. Chan, ScD, a professor in the UCSF Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and the Department of Urology. Co-authors include Stacey A. Kenfield, ScD, an assistant adjunct professor in the UCSF urology department. The research was conducted with collaborators at the Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women's Hospital.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Health (grants CA141298, CA112355, CA055075, CA133891, CA098566); the Department of Defense (grant W81XWH-11-1-0529); and the Prostate Cancer Foundation.

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.

Follow UCSF
UCSF.edu | Facebook.com/ucsf | Twitter.com/ucsf | YouTube.com/ucsf

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

To germinate, or not to germinate, that is the question…

2013-06-11
Scientists at the University of York have uncovered new insights into the way seeds use gene networks to control when they germinate in response to environmental signals. Timing of seed germination is crucial for survival of plants in the wild and is also important for commercial seed production where there is a need to ensure uniform growth. A cold environment can signal an imminent winter so the mother plant produces dormant seeds that will not grow until the following spring. A warmer environment can signal an early summer with the mother plant producing seeds that ...

Reputation can trump money

2013-06-11
Whether it's an effort to increase recycling rates, reduce energy usage or cut carbon emissions, the conventional wisdom says that the best way to get people to do the right thing is to make it worth their while with cold, hard cash. But Harvard researchers say there may be an easier, cheaper way – by appealing to people's reputation, not their wallets. Using enrollment of thousands of people in a California blackout prevention program as an experimental test bed, a team of researchers that included Erez Yoeli, a researcher at the Federal Trade Commission, Moshe Hoffman, ...

Shape of nanoparticles points the way toward more targeted drugs

2013-06-11
LA JOLLA, Calif., June 10, 2013 — Conventional treatments for diseases such as cancer can carry harmful side effects—and the primary reason is that such treatments are not targeted specifically to the cells of the body where they're needed. What if drugs for cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other diseases can be targeted specifically and only to cells that need the medicine, and leave normal tissues untouched? A new study involving Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute's Erkki Ruoslahti, M.D., Ph.D., contributing to work by Samir Mitragotri, Ph.D., at the University ...

Brain circuits link obsessive-compulsive behavior and obesity

2013-06-11
What started as an experiment to probe brain circuits involved in compulsive behavior has revealed a surprising connection with obesity. The University of Iowa-led researchers bred mice missing a gene known to cause obesity, and suspected to also be involved in compulsive behavior, with a genetic mouse model of compulsive grooming. The unexpected result was offspring that were neither compulsive groomers nor obese. The study, published the week of June 10 in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), suggests that the ...

Epigenetic factor likely plays a key role in fueling most common childhood cancer

2013-06-11
(Memphis, Tenn. – June 10, 2013) Changes in an epigenetic mechanism that turns expression of genes on and off may be as important as genetic alterations in causing pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), according to a study led by scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and published in the June 10 online edition of the Journal of Clinical Investigation. The results suggest the mechanism called cytosine methylation plays a previously under-appreciated role in the development of leukemia. Cytosine methylation involves adding or removing methyl groups ...

Simple theory may explain mysterious dark matter

2013-06-11
Most of the matter in the universe may be made out of particles that possess an unusual, donut-shaped electromagnetic field called an anapole. This proposal, which endows dark matter particles with a rare form of electromagnetism, has been strengthened by a detailed analysis performed by a pair of theoretical physicists at Vanderbilt University: Professor Robert Scherrer and post-doctoral fellow Chiu Man Ho. An article about the research was published online last month by the journal Physics Letters B. "There are a great many different theories about the nature of dark ...

Reduced brain volume in kids with low birth-weight tied to academic struggles

2013-06-11
EUGENE, Ore. -- (June 10, 2013) -- An analysis of recent data from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of 97 adolescents who were part of study begun with very low birth weight babies born in 1982-1986 in a Cleveland neonatal intensive care unit has tied smaller brain volumes to poor academic achievement. More than half of the babies that weighed less than 1.66 pounds and more than 30 percent of those less than 3.31 pounds at birth later had academic deficits. (Less than 1.66 pounds is considered extremely low birth weight; less than 3.31 pounds is labeled very low birth ...

New study proposes solution to long-running debate as to how stable the Earth system is

2013-06-11
Researchers at the University of Southampton have proposed an answer to the long-running debate as to how stable the Earth system is. The Earth, with its core-driven magnetic field, oceans of liquid water, dynamic climate and abundant life is arguably the most complex system in the known Universe. Life arose on Earth over three and a half billion years ago and it would appear that despite planetary scale calamities such as the impacts of massive meteorites, runaway climate change and increases in brightness of the Sun, it has continued to grow, reproduce and evolve ever ...

Lifespan-extending drug given late in life reverses age-related heart disease in mice

2013-06-11
Elderly mice suffering from age-related heart disease saw a significant improvement in cardiac function after being treated with the FDA-approved drug rapamycin for just three months. The research, led by a team of scientists at the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, shows how rapamycin impacts mammalian tissues, providing functional insights and possible benefits for a drug that has been shown to extend the lifespan of mice as much as 14 percent. There are implications for human health in the research appearing online in Aging Cell: heart disease is the leading cause ...

Earthquake swarms; marine Ediacaran fossil traces; Alca obsidian; Mammoth Mountain

2013-06-11
Boulder, Colo., USA – Studies in this latest batch of GEOLOGY postings cover tiny Ediacara organisms, CO2 gas following seismic swarms, the growth of Mount Everest, methane seeps, the remarkably modern character of Cretaceous seawater composition, geodynamic models of the assembly of Rodinia and Gondwana, and whether subduction zones are invading the Atlantic. Other studies cover the Danube Basin, the Andes, the Central Range of Taiwan; and the seafloor near Costa Rica. All article abstracts are open access online. Highlights are provided below. GEOLOGY articles published ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Crohn's & Colitis Congress® spotlights key IBD research findings

Vanilla farmers search for a crop and conservation sweet spot

Global “sisterhood” seeks to understand what makes a healthy vaginal microbiome

Announcing the winners of the 5th annual Rising Black Scientists Awards

Food: Cracking the method for the ‘perfect’ boiled egg

Cannabis use disorder emergency department visits and hospitalizations and 5-year mortality

COVID-19 pandemic and rates of common ophthalmic procedures among Medicare beneficiaries

Updated drug information handout outdoes FDA’s version

Gemini North teams up with LOFAR to reveal largest radio jet ever seen in the early universe

Researchers discover a major driver of inflammatory pathology in autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases

Research in fruit flies pinpoints brain pathways involved in alcohol-induced insomnia

Cancer diagnoses and deaths are declining in Appalachia but remain significantly higher compared to other US regions

Why some heavy drinkers develop advanced liver disease, while others do not

OmicsFootPrint: Mayo Clinic’s AI tool offers a new way to visualize disease

New genetic mutation linked to drug resistance in non-small cell lung cancer patient

Single-photon LiDAR delivers detailed 3D images at distances up to 1 kilometer

Fear of breast cancer recurrence: Impact and coping with being in a dark place

Korea University researchers analysis of income-related disparities in mortality among young adults with diabetes

Study shows link between income inequality and health and education disparities may drive support for economic reform

HonorHealth Research Institute’s Chief Medical Officer is recognized by the world’s leading organization for cancer doctors

InsectNet technology identifies insects around the world and around the farm

Restoring predators, restoring ecosystems: Yellowstone wolves and other carnivores drive strong trophic cascade

Corn’s ancient ancestors are calling

Mass General Brigham’s Kraft Center Announces the 2025 Kraft Prize for Excellence and Innovation in Community Health

Whale poop contains iron that may have helped fertilize past oceans

Mercury content in tuna can be reduced with new packaging solution

Recycling the unrecyclable

Alien ocean could hide signs of life from spacecraft

Research unveils new strategies to tackle atrial fibrillation, a condition linked to stroke and dementia risks

Research spotlight: Researchers identify potential drug targets for future heart failure therapeutics

[Press-News.org] Men with prostate cancer should eat healthy vegetable fats
UC San Francisco-led study finds consuming olive oil and nuts may improve survival