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Knowing some basic facts about prostate cancer can keep your risk of developing it as
low as possible, and help you catch it early enough to survive it if it does develop.
And you may want to consider helping advance progress against the disease by
participating in the large new clinical trial (see below) testing the value of vitamin E
and selenium in preventing prostate cancer.
Are You at Risk of Prostate Cancer?
Does having a father or brother who developed prostate cancer
raise your risk? Learn what the risk
factors are, and how they influence your chances of developing the disease.
Can Diet and Exercise Lower Your Risk of Prostate Cancer?
Some studies show the lycopene
(found in high concentrations in tomatoes, grapefruit and watermelon) may help prevent the
disease. And other studies suggest some types of fish may help, and that flaxseed
oil, flavonoids
from citrus fruits, vitamins,
and soy
products might help in prevention also.
With news media reporting these new findings frequently, pills that contain some
elements of these foods are heavily marketed in stores today.
But a prostate cancer expert with the American Cancer Society (ACS) says men have to
play it smart to get the most benefit from new research, while avoiding practices that
could actually increase risk.
Right now, most of the literature on diet and prostate cancer is still lacking
the level of scientific certainty necessary to make solid recommendations to increase or
decrease intake of specific vitamins, minerals, or antioxidants, says Durado Brooks,
MD, MPH, director of prostate and colorectal cancer programs at the ACS.
And experience with beta carotene in cancer prevention trials showed that some
supplements can actually promote cancer, so it can be risky to get ahead of the
science, Brooks notes.
The best way to play it smart using diet to lower cancer risk is to use the ACS Guidelines on Nutrition and
Cancer to guide you to a diet high in vegetables, fruits, and grains and low in meat
and dairy products, notes Brooks.
And get physical, Brooks suggests. Physical
activity daily helps lower risk of some other cancers and may decrease
prostate cancer risk as well.
Exercise and a healthy diet have been shown to reduce the risk of cancer,
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and other health problems, without
running the risk of harm from using unproven methods, notes Brooks.
The SELECT trial for Prostate Cancer Prevention
Brooks notes that one cancer prevention trial a few years ago provided suggestions that
vitamin E might lower prostate cancer risk; another suggested the mineral selenium might
do the same.
Researchers were excited, but because the studies were designed to test those
substances against other cancers, they couldnt be sure the findings werent a
fluke.
As a result, researchers are now seeking 32,400 healthy men currently not taking
supplements of either substance to participate in the Selenium
and Vitamin E Cancer Prevention Trial (SELECT) to learn whether either substance alone
or both together can lower prostate cancer risk.
This is a very important area of research, and men not currently taking
supplements of either substance should consider participating in it, notes Brooks.
Screening: Dont Let Prostate Cancer Sneak Up
Prostate cancer is a highly curable disease if caught early, notes Brooks.
A simple blood test called the PSA
test combined with a digital rectal exam, once a year, can provide the advance warning
men need to survive the disease, he notes.
Annual screening should be offered to high-risk men (African-Americans and those with a
family history of the disease) beginning at 45, and at 50 for other men, notes Brooks.
Low Risk Means Less Worry
The risk of prostate cancer increases with age, and nothing can bring that risk
to zero, notes Brooks.
But eating a healthy diet, exercising regularly, and getting appropriate
screening can help a man keep his risk of having a life-threatening problem with the
disease as low as possible, notes Brooks.
Its the safe, effective, thinking mans approach to prostate
health, he concludes.
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