The Medical Minute: Cancer prevention

Feb 18, 2009 By John Messmer

People often ask their physicians what they can do to prevent cancers. Various supplements and unorthodox treatments to clean out the system and purge toxins are promoted by convincing arguments as a way to improve health and, by inference, reduce cancer risk.

The good news is there are some basic behaviors that have been shown to be effective in reducing cancer risk that people can do now.

Smoking

Smoking increases the chance of multiple cancers: lung, mouth, throat, esophagus, larynx (voicebox), pancreas, kidney, cervix, and bladder. Chewing tobacco and snuff increase the risk of mouth, esophagus and throat cancers. Being around smokers is also a risk due to second hand smoke. Even if you do nothing else, avoid tobacco in all forms and amounts.

Eat the right stuff

Limited alcohol consumption has been associated with reduced risk of heart disease, but excess alcohol is bad for the heart and can increase the risk of mouth, throat, esophagus, kidney, liver and breast cancers. Men should keep alcohol consumption to two drinks per day; women should limit themselves to no more than one per day.

Supplements should be added to a healthy diet rather than taken as a substitute for one. However, there is little data to support the use of supplements in cancer prevention, and several have been shown to have no benefit whatsoever in reducing cancer risk.

Plant-based food, particularly a variety of different color vegetables and fruits each day plus grains and legumes (beans, lentils, and the like), reduces the risk of gastrointestinal cancers. Less fat, particularly animal fat, not only lowers risks of cancer, but in combination with a greater proportion of plant foods, can help keep weight in healthy ranges. Obesity has its own risks of cancer.

Control weight and keep active

Being overweight increases the risks of breast, uterus, colon, prostate, esophagus and stomach cancers. In addition to a good diet, exercise helps keep weight down, but even by itself lowers risk of prostate, breast, colon and uterine cancer. A moderate-intensity workout, such as walking briskly 30 minutes per day five days per week, is a good start. Any activity that requires exertion and raises the heart rate can contribute to overall health and, thus, disease prevention. Examples include dancing, yard work, walking, running, rowing and swimming.

Let the sun shine - but cover up

Most skin cancer is preventable, but it’s common due to exposure to the sun and other sources of ultraviolet light. The highest intensity of sunlight is about 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. from April to October, although the season starts earlier and ends later the farther south a person lives. Staying indoors during peak intensity hours is advisable but not always feasible. When outdoors, take advantage of shady areas. Use sun block with a sun protective factor (spf) of at least 15. Light colored, loose-fitting clothing can provide sun protection during outdoor activity, and a broad-brimmed hat will protect the scalp and ears.

There is no safe or healthy tan. Pre-tanning before extended sun exposure may minimally reduce the risk of sunburn, but it does not reduce the risk of cancer and probably increases it (in addition to prematurely aging and wrinkling the skin). Society must reconsider tanned skin as damaged, not attractive.

Get a shot

Human papilloma virus (HPV) is a sexually transmitted infection that causes cancer of the cervix. A vaccination is available for girls beginning around age 9. The vaccine can significantly reduce cervical cancer risk. It is 100 percent effective at protecting against infection with the two strains of HPV responsible for 70 percent of cervical cancer cases.

Hepatitis B increases liver cancer risk. All children are immunized against hepatitis B as part of the recommended immunization series, but older children and adults at risk also should be vaccinated. Anyone who comes into contact with human blood, such as health care workers, should be immunized.

Be judicious

The more sex partners a person has, the greater his or her risk of cancer through HPV infections, hepatitis B infections, and HIV infection, all of which are associated with increased cancer risk. HIV is associated with an increased risk of lymphoma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, and cancer of the liver, cervix and anus.

Similarly, intravenous drug use raises HIV and hepatitis B risk.

Look for it

Since not all types of cancer are preventable yet, in addition to reducing risk through the tactics noted above, looking for cancer early when it is most curable is the final part of the cancer prevention strategy. Women should have regular cervical cancer screenings, if they still have a cervix, and regular mammograms. Younger men - adolescents through the 30s - should check for testicular lumps. Middle-aged and older men may benefit from prostate cancer screening, although how much benefit is still under debate. Men should discuss this with their doctors for personal recommendations.

Colon cancer screening starting at age 50 for most people is accepted as beneficial. Skin cancer screening may be useful for those who have sun damage already.

See your doctor

Periodic health maintenance visits with a primary care provider can help people stay on track with a personal cancer prevention plan.

The bottom line

Although cancer may not be preventable, people can make a significant dent in their risk through healthy living and periodic check-ups.

Dr. John Messmer is associate professor of family and community medicine at Penn State College of Medicine and a staff physician at Penn State Hershey Medical Center.
Provided by Penn State

Explore further: New smartphone application improves colonoscopy preparation

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Nations agree to phase out toxic chemical HBCD

May 10, 2013

Governments have agreed to phase out the use of the toxic chemical HBCD, and restrict trade in four other dangerous substances, the head of the UN's anti-pollution division said Friday.

Discovery helps show how breast cancer spreads

May 05, 2013

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered why breast cancer patients with dense breasts are more likely than others to develop aggressive tumors that spread. The ...

Recommended for you

New smartphone application improves colonoscopy preparation

9 hours ago

The use of a smartphone application significantly improves patients' preparation for a colonoscopy, according to new research presented today at Digestive Disease Week (DDW). The preparation process, which begins days in ...

New colonoscope provides ground-breaking view of colon

May 18, 2013

A ground-breaking advance in colonoscopy technology signals the future of colorectal care, according to research presented today at Digestive Disease Week(DDW). Additional research focuses on optimizing the minimal withdrawal ...

ASCO: combo antibody therapy effective for melanoma

May 17, 2013

(HealthDay)—Concurrent use of two immune checkpoint antibodies—ipilimumab and nivolumab—may be effective for the treatment of advanced melanoma, according to a proof-of-principal study presented in ...

Risk factors ID'd for poor cutaneous cell CA outcomes

May 17, 2013

(HealthDay)—The risks of metastasis and death associated with cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) are low, but significant, and risk factors for poor outcome include tumor diameter, invasion beyond ...

User comments : 2

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

Soylent
not rated yet Feb 18, 2009
Supplements should be added to a healthy diet rather than taken as a substitute for one. However, there is little data to support the use of supplements in cancer prevention, and several have been shown to have no benefit whatsoever in reducing cancer risk.


There's little data to support the use of supplements at ALL in a healthy diet.
Roach
not rated yet Feb 19, 2009
The article doesn't endorse supplements, rather it's just saying don't rely on them to fix everything that eating a snickers, drinking a coke, and smoking a cigarette for breakfast breaks. It's not really an article about a healthy diet but cancer prevention, but way to stay on topic there champ.

More news stories

Honeybees trained in Croatia to find land mines

(AP)—Mirjana Filipovic is still haunted by the land mine blast that killed her boyfriend and blew off her left leg while on a fishing trip nearly a decade ago. It happened in a field that was supposedly ...

Russia retrieves mice, newts from space

A Russian capsule filled with 45 mice and 15 newts along with other small animals returned from a month's mission in orbit on Sunday with data scientists hope will pave the way for a manned flight to Mars.

German energy shift faces headwinds

Tense engineers have their eyes peeled on complex colour-coded diagrams on a wall-sized screen that makes their control room look like the inside of a spaceship.