PDA

View Full Version : Eating Fatty Fish May Cut Women's Kidney Cancer Risk


Welcome to the Active Low-Carber Forums

Support for Atkins diet, Protein Power, Neanderthin (Paleo Diet), CAD/CALP, Dr. Bernstein Diabetes Solution and any other healthy low-carb diet or plan, all are welcome in our lowcarb community. Forget starvation and fad diets -- join the healthy eating crowd! You may register by clicking here, it's free!



kebaldwin
Wed, Sep-20-06, 04:23
Eating Fatty Fish May Cut Women's Kidney Cancer Risk

By Judith Groch, MedPage Today Staff Writer
Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
September 19, 2006

MedPage Today Action Points

When talking to patients concerned about kidney cancer emphasize that the benefits ascribed to fatty, but not lean fish, came from a preliminary epidemiologic study of women and require further confirmation.

Inform interested patients that the beneficial marine fatty fish in this study included salmon, herring, mackerel, and sardines. The lean fish included mainly cod, tuna, and sweet-water fish, as well as seafood such as shrimp, lobster, and crayfish.

Review
STOCKHOLM, Sept. 19 -- Dining on fatty fish at least once a week lowered women's risk of renal cell carcinoma, but lean fish and the shrimp-lobster tribe offered no such benefit, found researchers here.

A preliminary study found that women who consumed one or more servings of fatty cold-water fish per week during an average of 15.3 years had a statistically significant 44% decreased risk of renal cell carcinoma compared with women who eschewed fish, according to a report in the Sept. 20 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

For a subset of women with consistent long-term consumption of fatty fish at baseline and 10 years later (one to three servings a month or more), the risk was down 74%, said Alicja Wolk, D.M. Sc., of the Karolinska Institute, and colleagues.

However, consumption of lean fish was not significantly associated with the risk of kidney cancer in any of the follow-up periods, the researchers said.

Fatty fish included salmon, herring, sardines, and mackerel. Lean fish included mainly cod, tuna, and sweet-water fish, as well as seafood such as shrimp, lobster, and crayfish.

The findings came from the Swedish Mammography Cohort, a population-based prospective cohort study of 61,433 women, ages 40 to 76, without a previous diagnosis of cancer at baseline (March 1, 1987 to Dec. 14, 1990). Participants filled out a 67-item food-frequency questionnaire at baseline and in September 1997.

During 940,357 person-years of follow-up, there were 150 incident cases of renal cell carcinoma. After adjustment for potential confounders, the researchers found an inverse association of fatty fish consumption with the risk of kidney cancer (P for trend=.02), but no association with lean fish consumption.

Compared with no consumption, the multivariate rate ratio (RR) was 0.56 (95% confidence interval 0.35-0.91) for women eating fatty fish once a week or more.

For a subset of 36,664 women who filled out the baseline and the 1997 questionnaires, the RR was 0.26 (CI, 0.10-0.67) for women reporting consistent consumption of fatty fish versus women who ate no fish. There were 40 incident renal cell carcinoma cases during the 1998 to 2004 follow-up, the researchers reported.

On the other hand, the researchers said, there was no statistically significant association with lean fish or other seafood (multivariate rate ratio [RR], 0.71, 95% CI, 0.34-1.47) for one or more servings per week versus no consumption. Exclusion of the first two years of follow-up did not change the results.

No previous study has investigated the association between fatty fish and lean fish specifically and the risk for renal cell carcinoma, Dr. Wolk said. Previous studies of kidney cancer risk and fish consumption have had inconsistent results and have analyzed total fish consumption not taking into account the large differences between lean and fatty fish in the content of omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin D, she added.

Compared with lean fish, fatty cold-water fish have up to a 20- to 30-times higher content of marine omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid, eicosapentaenoic acid, and docosahexanoic acid, all of which have been reported to slow cancer development.

Also, the vitamin D levels in fatty fish are three to five times higher than in lean fish, while lower serum vitamin D levels have also been linked to the development and progression of renal cell carcinoma, the researchers wrote.

The consumption of fatty fish in Sweden has been increasing since the baseline time of this cohort, the researchers wrote. The consumption of salmon, the main fatty fish, almost doubled, and the consumption of canned herring and other fatty fish increased by 50% during the follow-up period. Thus, the consumption of fatty fish during the two study periods may be greater than that reported in this study, they said.

Several molecular mechanisms have been proposed for the effect of marine fatty acids on carcinogenesis. The best known is ascribed to suppression of arachidonic acid-derived eicosanoid biosynthesis, leading to an altered immune response of cancer cells and modulation of inflammation, cell proliferation, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, the researchers wrote.

As for the role of vitamin D, the researchers suggested that low serum levels of vitamin D3, plentiful in fatty fish, may influence the development and progression of renal cell carcinoma. Vitamin D3 exerts its biological activity by binding to the vitamin D receptors, which are present in kidney cells. The vitamin D receptor genotype, they said, may play an important role in determining the risk of developing more aggressive kidney cancer.

Turning to the study's limitations, the researchers noted that the self-administered questionnaire may have misclassified several types of fish. Because of the observational nature of the study, it is possible, they said, that an unevaluated risk factor for renal cell carcinoma, correlated with fatty fish consumption, had some effect on the results.

Another limitation, they said is that because they did not analyze the omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin D intakes directly, the explanation of the observed results is based on speculation.

They concluded, "Our results, however, require confirmation because this is the first epidemiological study addressing this issue."

Primary source: Journal of the American Medical Association
Source reference:
Wolk, A. et al, "Long-term Fatty Fish Consumption and Renal Cell Carcinoma Incidence in Women" JAMA 2006; 296:1371-1376.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/tbprint.cfm?tbid=4142

Zuleikaa
Wed, Sep-20-06, 06:40
Also, the vitamin D levels in fatty fish are three to five times higher than in lean fish, while lower serum vitamin D levels have also been linked to the development and progression of renal cell carcinoma, the researchers wrote. Of course!!

cs_carver
Wed, Sep-20-06, 07:58
What was the point of the study? Seems like a bit of a fishing expedition... Ask a lot of women about what they ate, and see what comes up otherwise, and then discover you missed some question you wish you'd asked.

Turning to the study's limitations, the researchers noted that the self-administered questionnaire may have misclassified several types of fish. Because of the observational nature of the study, it is possible, they said, that an unevaluated risk factor for renal cell carcinoma, correlated with fatty fish consumption, had some effect on the results.

What about the "typical Swedish diet" causes renal cell carcinoma?

Was the rate found what they expected to find? Was one group higher, or lower, than expected? Or was it simply that they looked at a lot of medical histories and this one disease condition jumped out?

All for Omega 3s, but more for knowing what the trigger is.

kebaldwin
Sat, Sep-23-06, 06:59
I assume this is the same study ...

A report published in the September 20, 2006 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) revealed that women who ate more fatty fish had a lower risk of the common form of kidney cancer known as renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Renal cell carcinoma affects the functional tissue of the kidney, and comprises over 80 percent of kidney cancers. Previous studies that looked at total fish consumption, but not fatty fish consumption, had failed to find a significant association with a reduced risk of major cancers or renal cell carcinoma.

Alicja Wolk, DMSc, of the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden and colleagues utilized data from 61,433 women participating in the Swedish Mammography Cohort who had no history of a cancer diagnosis upon enrollment. Food questionnaires administered between 1987 and 1990, and again in 1997 were analyzed for fatty fish (salmon, herring, sardines, and mackerel), lean fish, and seafood intake.

Over an average 15.3 years of follow-up, 150 cases of renal cell carcinoma were diagnosed. While no association was found between renal cell carcinoma risk and lean fish or seafood consumption, women who initially reported eating fatty fish at least once per week had a 44 percent lower risk of the disease than those who ate no fatty fish. When the 36,664 women who completed the second questionnaire were examined, consistent consumption of fish, defined as at least one to three times per month, was associated with a 74 percent lower risk of renal cell carcinoma compared to those who consistently did not eat fatty fish.

"Our results support the hypothesis that frequent consumption of fatty fish may lower the risk of RCC possibly due to increased intake of fish oil rich in eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaneoic acid as well as vitamin D," the authors write. "Our results, however, require confirmation because this is the first epidemiological study addressing this issue," they conclude.

And in another study, published online on September 15, 2006 in the International Journal of Cancer, researchers at the Moores Cancer Center at University of California, San Diego demonstrated an association between latitudes with reduced sunlight exposure and an increased risk of kidney cancer. Because ultraviolet B radiation triggers the synthesis of vitamin D3 in the body, a deficiency of the vitamin could be a culprit in increased kidney cancer risk.

"Kidney cancer is a mysterious cancer for which no widely accepted cause or means of prevention exists, so we wanted to build on research by one of the co-authors, William Grant, and see if it might be related to deficiency of vitamin D," stated professor of Family and Preventive Medicine in the UCSD School of Medicine and coauthor Cedric Garland, Dr PH.

In addition to reduced sunlight, greater intake of calories from animal sources was also found to be independently associated with increased kidney cancer risk in this study.


Health Concern

Cancer vaccines and immunotherapy

Cancer immunotherapies, including cancer vaccines, are novel investigational cancer therapies. In contrast to chemotherapy and radiotherapy regimens that are often associated with severe side effects, cancer immunotherapy stimulates the body’s immune system and natural resistance to cancer, thus offering a gentler means of cancer treatment that is less damaging to the rest of the body. Surgery is generally (but not always) performed, prior to immunotherapy, to remove most of the tumor (Hanna MG, Jr. et al 2001; Jocham D et al 2004). Vaccination or immunotherapy prompts the immune system to kill residual cancer cells that persist after surgery and could result in the cancer recurring.

A cancer vaccine for renal cell carcinoma has recently been tested in a phase III setting using autologous (self-donated) cancer cells and lysates (prepared by breaking down cancer cells) (Doehn C et al 2003; Jocham D et al 2004). This study involved 558 renal cell carcinoma patients who were vaccinated (six injections in the skin once a month) with the autologous tumor cell vaccine after surgery (Jocham D et al 2004). After 70 months of follow-up, the progression-free survival of vaccinated patients was 67.8 percent compared to 59.3 percent in non-vaccinated patients (Jocham D et al 2004). These results support the use of this renal cell carcinoma vaccine following surgery (removal of a kidney) in renal cell carcinoma cases not larger than 2.5 cm (Jocham D et al 2004).

Although the direct effect of nutritional supplements on the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy has yet to be clinically evaluated, the impact of nutrition, particularly micronutrients, on immune cell function (that is, immunonutrition) is central to the success of any cancer treatment (Calder PC et al 2002b; Chandra RK 1999). Several nutrients are able to modulate immune response and counteract inflammatory processes. Zinc, omega-3 fatty acids, and glutamine all act differently to modulate immune response, but all appear to have the potential to protect against cancer progression (Grimble RF 2001).

http://www.lef.org/protocols/cancer/cancer_vaccines_01.htm

http://www.lef.org/newsletter/2006/2006_09_23.htm