DIET AND EXERCISE MAY PLAY A ROLE IN INHIBITING
GROWTH OF PROSTATE CANCER CELLS
A high-fat diet and sedentary
lifestyle may predispose men to prostate cancer. Research findings indicate
that adopting a low-fat, high-fiber diet and exercise program may play a
role in reducing the possibility of prostate cancer; results being presented
at a meeting on exercise and physiology
by international scientists
Portland, ME — A high-fat diet and
sedentary lifestyle may predispose men to prostate cancer through effects on
serum factors such as hormones. The Pritikin low-fat, high-fiber diet and
exercise program, on the other hand, may reduce the risk of clinical
prostate cancer, says R. James Barnard, Ph.D. Dr. Barnard, of the
Department of Physiological Science and the UCLA Division of Clinical
Nutrition, Department of Medicine, will present evidence that links a
low-fat diet and exercise to reduced prostate cancer cell growth at the 2000
American Physiological Intersociety Meeting, “The Integrative Biology of
Exercise,” being held September 20-23, 2000 in Portland, ME.
Background: Prostate cancer is the second
most common cancer in American men, after non-melanoma skin cancer; it is
the second leading cause of death due to cancer, just behind lung cancer.
More than l80,000 new cases are expected to be diagnosed this year, and an
estimated 32,000 men will die.
International death rates from prostate cancer can vary
widely. Asian countries have the lowest rates, while the United States has a
15-fold higher rate. Furthermore, Chinese and Japanese men who immigrate to
the U.S. have an increased incidence and mortality from prostate cancer
compared to men in their native countries. These studies suggest that
environmental factors associated with Western culture may promote the
development of clinical prostate cancer.
Numerous epidemiological and animal studies have
implicated dietary fat as one important environmental factor. Per capita fat
consumption has been linked to prostate cancer mortality in several
countries, and a low-fat diet has been shown to significantly slow the
growth of prostate tumors in immune-deficient mice. Additional studies have
demonstrated that men who are physically active have a reduced risk for
prostate cancer compared to physically inactive men. A low-fat diet combined
with exercise also affects serum hormones which may have an impact on the
risk of prostate cancer.
Methodology: Given the high prevalence of
obesity, sedentary lifestyle, and the known effects of diet and exercise on
circulating hormones, Dr. Barnard—a consultant with the Pritikin Program—and
his colleagues designed a study in which men underwent a low-fat, high-fiber
diet and exercise intervention. In the study, serum was obtained from 13
overweight men between the ages of 42 and 73 who underwent the Pritikin
residential, 11-day, low-fat, high-fiber diet and exercise program, as well
as from 8 men who had complied with the same regimen for a mean of 14.2
years.
The men were allowed to eat as much as they wanted and
meals were served buffet style. Prepared meals contained less than 10
percent of calories from fat, 15-20 percent of calories from protein, and
70-75 percent of calories from carbohydrate (primarily in the form of
vegetables, fruits, legumes, and whole grains). Protein was primarily
derived from sources other than animal, with the exception of nonfat milk
served daily and small amounts of fish or fowl. The diet contained less than
50 mg of cholesterol and 4g of sodium chloride per day. Alcohol, tobacco,
and caffeinated beverages were not allowed.
The exercise program consisted of walking at a training
heart rate for 30-60 minutes, 4-5 days per week, and once or twice a week
for 40-60 minutes below training heart rate (the training heart rate was
defined as 70-85 percent of the maximal heart rate obtained during a
treadmill, exercise tolerance test given before the program began).
Twelve-hour fasting blood was drawn from the subjects
on days one and eleven of the regimen and serum was separated from the blood
by centrifugation. Serum was also obtained from eight men between the ages
of 38 and 74 who had followed the same diet and exercise regimen for a mean
of 14.2 years. The serum was then used to stimulate the growth of prostate
cancer cells (LNCaP) in cell culture.
Results: The results of the study showed
a significantly reduced growth—30 percent—of LNCaP tumor cells following the
11-day program. Serum from the eight men who had followed the program on a
long-term basis showed an even further 15 percent reduction in the growth of
LNCaP cells.
The results also showed that the men who participated in the 11-day diet and
exercise program had significantly reduced body weight and body mass index
(BMI) after the regimen (although they were still considered overweight).
Their total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, and fasting glucose
were all reduced significantly (HDL-cholesterol did not change significantly
in the 11-day subjects). The long-term participants had significantly lower
weight, BMI, and triglyceride levels than the other subjects.
Conclusion: Though additional research is
needed, says Dr. Barnard, these findings confirm health guidelines that
recommend a very-low-fat, high-fiber diet, and exercise as an important
approach for prostate cancer prevention.
***
Physiology research in exercise has
been responsible for demonstrating that women are physiologically capable of
running the marathon without the event being detrimental to their health and
well being; the necessity of competing in a hydrated state, seeking frequent
fluid replacement during endurance events; being acclimatized to heat before
competition; scheduling competition in the early or late hours of the day;
and providing fluids that contain a fixed concentration of glucose during
the long distance events; the advantages to athletes -- particularly
swimmers -- of tapering in their training before competition; the importance
of the specificity concept in athletic training schedules and the acceptance
by coaches of team sports (basketball and volleyball, among others) that
specific power and strength training principles must be followed to enhance
performance. The American Physiological Society is devoted to fostering
scientific research, education, and the dissemination of scientific
information. By providing a spectrum of physiological information, the
Society plays a significant role in the progress of science and the
advancement of knowledge.
Editor's Note: For further
information or to schedule an interview, contact Donna Krupa at
703.527.7357; cell: 703.967.2751; or at
djkrupa1@aol.com; or visit the APS website at
www.the-aps.org.