Vegetarian
Diet
Vegetarian diet
linked to lower risk of colorectal cancers
Eating a vegetarian diet was associated with a lower risk of
colorectal cancers compared with nonvegetarians in a study of Seventh-Day
Adventist men and women, according to an article published online by JAMA
Internal Medicine.
Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in
the United States. Although great attention has been paid to screening, primary
prevention through lowering risk factors remains an important objective.
Dietary factors have been identified as a modifiable risk factor for colorectal
cancer, including red meat which is linked to increased risk and food rich in
dietary fiber which is linked to reduced risk, according to the study
background.
Among 77,659 study participants, Michael J. Orlich, M.D., Ph.D.,
of Loma Linda University, California, and coauthors identified 380 cases of
colon cancer and 110 cases of rectal cancer. Compared with nonvegetarians,
vegetarians had a 22 percent lower risk for all colorectal cancers, 19 percent
lower risk for colon cancer and 29 percent lower risk for rectal cancer.
Compared with nonvegetarians, vegans had a 16 percent lower risk of colorectal
cancer, 18 percent less for lacto-ovo (eat milk and eggs) vegetarians, 43
percent less in pescovegetarians (eat fish) and 8 percent less in
semivegetarians, according to study results.
"If such associations are causal, they may be important for
primary prevention of colorectal cancers. ... The evidence that vegetarian
diets similar to those of our study participants may be associated with a
reduced risk of colorectal cancer, along with prior evidence of the potential
reduced risk of obesity, hypertension, diabetes and mortality, should be
considered carefully in making dietary choices and in giving dietary
guidance," the study concludes.
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