Cardiologists and other doctors
already view artery-clogging red meat as a villain, and they now have another
reason to urge their patients to steer clear: A new study has found that men
have a higher risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer if they consume a
lot of ground beef and other red meat -- especially if the meat is grilled or
well-done.
The men in the study who ate about two
servings of hamburger or meat loaf per week were more than twice as likely to
have been diagnosed with aggressive prostate cancer as the men who ate none.
But most of that increase in risk can be attributed to how the meat was cooked.
When the researchers looked only at
the members of the burger-loving group who ate their meat grilled or barbecued,
the numbers told a different story: The men who preferred their burgers
well-done had double the cancer risk, while those who liked them medium (or
rarer) had a negligible increase in risk -- just 12 percent. A similar pattern
was seen with grilled or barbecued steak.
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"This is another piece of
evidence for the notion that red meat, particularly grilled meat, contains
carcinogens that may relate to prostate cancer," says Ronald D. Ennis,
M.D., director of radiation oncology at St. Luke's -- Roosevelt Hospital
Center, in New York City, who was not involved in the study.
When meat is cooked -- and charred --
at high temperatures over an open flame, a reaction occurs that causes the
formation of two chemicals: heterocyclic amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs). In animal studies, these chemicals have been shown to cause
several types of cancer, including prostate cancer.
Although by now it is well established
that red meat increases the risk of heart disease and colorectal cancer, its
role in prostate cancer has been less clear. Numerous studies have investigated
a possible link between meat consumption and prostate-cancer risk, but the
results have been inconsistent.
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cancer
"This study not only associates
red meat with a risk of prostate cancer but it takes it a little bit forward by
looking at the method of cooking and the degree of cooking," says Lee
Richstone, M.D., an associate professor of surgery and a prostate-cancer
specialist at the Smith Institute of Urology, in New Hyde Park, N.Y. "It
helps contribute to our understanding of a potential mechanism in the form of
[HCAs] and [PAHs]."
In the study, which was published this
week in the journal PLoS One, researchers at the University of California, San
Francisco compared about 500 men who recently had been diagnosed with aggressive
prostate cancer to a cancer-free group of similar size who served as controls.
All of the participants filled out detailed questionnaires about their diets
over the previous year, including the amount of meat they ate and how it was
prepared.
Men who ate the most ground beef were
2.3 times more likely than men who ate none to have aggressive prostate cancer.
Higher consumption of fatty lunchmeats (such as salami) and liver was also
associated with an increase in cancer risk. On the other hand, poultry, bacon,
and low-fat hot dogs and sausages appeared to have little influence on cancer
risk.
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The study "certainly supports the
notion that these types of foods may be harmful in some ways," Ennis says.
Close to one-fifth of U.S. men will at
some point in their lives develop prostate cancer, which ranges in severity
from benign tumors that need little or no treatment to very aggressive forms
that are usually deadly. Age, family history, and genetics all have been shown
to increase risk. The evidence for environmental risk factors -- including diet
-- is less clear, though researchers have long suspected they play a role
because of the wide geographical variation in prostate-cancer rates.
The study is far from airtight. The
data on meat consumption relied on the memory of the participants, for
instance. And although the researchers took into account several known risk
factors for prostate cancer (such as family history, smoking, and body mass
index), it's possible that other unidentified factors contributed to the
apparent link between meat consumption and cancer risk.
Still, the findings are compelling
enough that men should consider exercising "moderation and caution,"
Richstone says.
"There's an expanding and
building body of literature that does point to this type of connection, and I
think papers like this make for a stronger and stronger argument that men need
to moderate their intake of highly cooked meat," he says.
By Amanda Gardner, Health.com
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