From foodconsumer.org
Soy food may lower prostate cancer risk
By Ben Wasserman - foodconsumer.org
Mar 11, 2007 - 8:03:48 PM
Increased intake of soy isoflavones may reduce the risk of
localized prostate cancer by up to 50%, according to a Japanese study, which also
found high intake of soy compounds may worsen advanced prostate cancer.
The study published in a recent issue of Cancer Epidemiology
Biomarkers & Prevention was the first prospective study to establish an
inverse association between isoflavones and localized prostate cancer in a
Japanese population, according to the researchers.
Many early studies have demonstrated a preventative effect
of soy isoflavones against prostate cancer in animal models, but the results
from epidemiologic studies are inconsistent.
One study conducted by Jacobsen BK and colleagues from the
Institute of
Community
Medicine,
University
of Tromso,
Norway
found that those with high consumption of soy milk were at reduced risk of
prostate cancer.
The study published in the Dec. 1998 issue of Cancer Causes
Control involved 225 incident cases of prostate cancer among 12, 395 California
Seventh-Adventist men who reported their status of soy milk consumption in
1976.
The researchers found consuming soy milk more than once a
day was associated with a 70 percent reduced risk of prostate cancer.
The association held true even after other
factors were included in the analysis.
Another study by Lee MM and colleagues from the Department
of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the
University
of
California -
San Francisco also showed that consumption of
soy foods and isoflavones was associated with reduced risk of prostate cancer.
The study published in the July 2003 issue of Cancer
epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention found those with their intake of
tufu, genistein, or daidzein individually in the highest tertile were more than
40% less likely to have prostate cancer than those with their intake in the
lowest tertile.
In the current study of 32,509 Japanese men ages 45 to 74,
the researchers from The Japanese National Cancer Center analyzed data from 307
cases of diagnosed prostate cancer between 1995 and 2004 among which 74 cases
were advanced, 220 cases were organ localized and 13 cases were unclassified in terms of their stages.
Overall, consumption of genistein, daidzein, miso soup, and
soy food were not associated with reduced risk of total prostate cancer, but was
linked with reduced risk of localized prostate cancer.
The association was stronger among men who were at 60 or
older in whom the prostate cancer risk was reduced by consumption of by
isoflavones and soy food in a dose-responsive matter.
That is, the more soy food they ate, the
lower their prostate cancer.
The results showed that highest quartile intake of
genistein, daidzein, and soy food was each associated with a 50% reduction of
localized prostate cancer.
Soy consumption is higher in
Asia
than in the West.
And soy consumption
was inverse associated with risk of prostate cancer.
Because of this, many researchers believe the association
between say and cancer may be real.
However, many of those studies associating soy food
consumption and lower risk of prostate cancer did not intend to reveal a causal
relation between the two.
It is well
known that in the countries where men eat high amounts of soy people also eat much
less animal foods such as meat and dairy products.
One possibility that can not be excluded is that the
seemingly protective effect of soy food against prostate cancer may be actually
result from the low consumption of meat and dairy or other risk factors.
Further studies are needed to clarify how soy products would
affect the risk of prostate cancer.