From foodconsumer.org
High Saturated Fat Diets Linked to Short, Failure-Free Survival Following Prostatectomy
By pcrm.org
May 12, 2008 - 1:08:56 PM
High Saturated Fat Diets Linked to Short, Failure-Free Survival Following Prostatectomy
A recent study showed that men who consumed a high saturated fat
(HSF) diet were significantly more likely to have a biochemical failure
following prostate cancer removal and a shorter
biochemical-failure-free survival than men on a low saturated fat (LSF)
diet. Researchers looked at 309 white patients at the University of
Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center with clinically organ-confined
prostate cancer who were treated only with prostatectomy. Food
frequency questionnaires were compiled to reflect dietary intake one
year before diagnosis. Five years after surgery, 80 percent of men who
consumed an LSF diet were disease free, compared to 65 percent of men
who consumed a HSF diet.
Those who consumed HSF diets were comparatively younger and had
higher body mass indices at diagnosis than those with LSF diets. The
top contributors to the saturated fat intake for this population were
beef steak, cheese and cheese spreads, hamburgers and cheeseburgers,
eggs, ice cream, and salad dressings/mayonnaise. In this study, LSF
intake was on average 23.4 grams per day and HSF was 37.2 grams per
day. The government recommends no more than 10 percent of calories from
saturated fat.
Strom SS, Yamamura Y, Forman
MR, Pettaway CA, Barrera SL, DiGiovanni J. Saturated fat intake
predicts biochemical failure after prostatectomy.
Int J Cancer. 2008;122:2581-2585.
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