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HomeHealthDr Michael Greger: WFPB diet may reverse early stage prostate cancer

Dr Michael Greger: WFPB diet may reverse early stage prostate cancer

In his book How Not to Die, Dr Michael Greger notes that prostate cancer is much more common than most people think: autopsy studies have shown that about half of men over the age of eighty suffer from it. Although most die of other diseases, prostate cancer still kills twenty-eight thousand men every year.  (US stats)

Recent studies have revealed a link between diet and prostate cancer. Population studies have suggested the prevalence of prostate cancer increases as animal consumption increases.

For example, the death rate of prostate cancer in Japan has increased twenty-five-fold since World War II, and this dramatic spike coincides with a twenty-fold increase in dairy consumption, a seven-fold increase in egg consumption, and a nine-fold increase in meat consumption.

Dairy consumption has been consistently associated with risk: a 2015 meta-analysis and review found that high intakes of dairy products—milk and cheese (including low and nonfat varieties but excluding non-dairy sources of calcium), appear to increase total prostate cancer risk.

“If you have early-stage prostate cancer, you may be able to reverse its progression with a plant-based diet,” Greger says. After conquering our number-one killer, heart disease, Dr. Dean Ornish moved on to killer number two, cancer. Prostate cancer patients were randomized into two groups: a control group that wasn’t given any diet or lifestyle advice beyond whatever their personal doctors told them to do, and a healthy-living group prescribed a plant-based diet centred on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and beans, along with other healthy lifestyle behaviours.

After a year, the control group’s blood PSA—a marker of prostate cancer growth inside the body—tended to increase, but the plant-based group’s PSA levels tended to go down, which suggests their prostate tumours actually shrank. No surgery, no chemotherapy, no radiation—just eating and living healthily.

WFL
WFLhttp://wholefoodliving.life
Whole Food Living reviews and selects material from a wide variety of international sources. Our primary focus covers food, health and environment. We publish fact checked official announcements made as the result of formal studies conducted by Universities, respected health care organisations, journals, and scientists around the globe.
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