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Nabulod laeng ti ladawan a naaramat iti salaysay] |
REGULAR
consumption of
deep-fried
foods such as
French fries,
fried chicken
and doughnuts
is associated
with an
increased risk
of prostate
cancer, and
the effect
appears to be
slightly
stronger with
regard to more
aggressive
forms of the
disease,
according to a
study by
investigators
at Fred
Hutchinson
Cancer
Research
Center.
Corresponding
author Janet
L. Stanford,
Ph.D., and
colleagues
Marni
Stott-Miller,
Ph.D., a
postdoctoral
research
fellow and
Marian
Neuhouser,
Ph.D., all of
the Hutchinson
Center's
Public Health
Sciences
Division, have
published
their findings
online in The
Prostate.
While previous
studies have
suggested that
eating foods
made with
high-heat
cooking
methods, such
as grilled
meats, may
increase the
risk of
prostate
cancer, this
is the first
study to
examine the
addition of
deep frying to
the equation.
From
French fries
to doughnuts:
Eating more
than once a
week may raise
risk
Specifically,
Stanford,
co-director of
the Hutchinson
Center's
Program in
Prostate
Cancer
Research, and
colleagues
found that men
who reported
eating French
fries, fried
chicken, fried
fish and/or
doughnuts at
least once a
week were at
an increased
risk of
prostate
cancer as
compared to
men who said
they ate such
foods less
than once a
month.
In
particular,
men who ate
one or more of
these foods at
least weekly
had an
increased risk
of prostate
cancer that
ranged from 30
to 37 percent.
Weekly
consumption of
these foods
was associated
also with a
slightly
greater risk
of more
aggressive
prostate
cancer. The
researchers
controlled for
factors such
as age, race,
family history
of prostate
cancer,
body-mass
index and PSA
screening
history when
calculating
the
association
between eating
deep-fried
foods and
prostate
cancer risk.
"The
link between
prostate
cancer and
select
deep-fried
foods appeared
to be limited
to the highest
level of
consumption --
defined in our
study as more
than once a
week -- which
suggests that
regular
consumption of
deep-fried
foods confers
particular
risk for
developing
prostate
cancer,"
Stanford said.
Deep
frying may
trigger
formation of
carcinogens in
food Possible
mechanisms
behind the
increased
cancer risk,
Stanford
hypothesizes,
include the
fact that when
oil is heated
to
temperatures
suitable for
deep frying,
potentially
carcinogenic
compounds can
form in the
fried food.
They include
acrylamide
(found in
carbohydrate-rich
foods such as
French fries),
heterocyclic
amines and
polycyclic
aromatic
hydrocarbons
(chemicals
formed when
meat is cooked
at high
temperatures),
aldehyde (an
organic
compound found
in perfume)
and acrolein
(a chemical
found in
herbicides).
These toxic
compounds are
increased with
re-use of oil
and increased
length of
frying time.
Foods cooked
with high heat
also contain
high levels of
advanced
glycation
endproducts,
or AGEs, which
have been
associated
with chronic
inflammation
and oxidative
stress.
Deep-fried
foods are
among the
highest in AGE
content. A
chicken breast
deep fried for
20 minutes
contains more
than nine
times the
amount of AGEs
as a chicken
breast boiled
for an hour,
for example.
For
the study,
Stanford and
colleagues
analyzed data
from two prior
population-based
case-control
studies
involving a
total of 1,549
men diagnosed
with prostate
cancer and
1,492
age-matched
healthy
controls. The
men were
Caucasian and
African-American
Seattle-area
residents and
ranged in age
from 35 to 74
years.
Participants
were asked to
fill out a
dietary
questionnaire
about their
usual food
intake,
including
specific
deep-fried
foods.
The
first study of
its kind "To
the best of
our knowledge,
this is the
first study to
look at the
association
between intake
of deep-fried
food and risk
of prostate
cancer,"
Stanford said.
However,
deep-fried
foods have
previously
been linked to
cancers of the
breast, lung,
pancreas, head
and neck, and
esophagus.
Because
deep-fried
foods are
primarily
eaten outside
the home, it
is possible
that the link
between these
foods and
prostate
cancer risk
may be a sign
of high
consumption of
fast foods in
general, the
authors wrote,
citing the
dramatic
increase in
fast-food
restaurants
and fast-food
consumption in
the U.S. in
the past
several
decades.
The
project was
supported by
the National
Cancer
Institute and
Fred
Hutchinson
Cancer
Research
Center.
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