Living Healthy


Women who ate two or more servings of tomato sauce per week had a 40 percent decrease in risk for ovarian cancer when compared to those who ate less than one serving a month.

Can Certain Foods Prevent Cancer?

We all know that diet and health are closely linked. But can certain foods actually reduce the risk of cancer?

As director of nutrition research at the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Nagi Kumar, Ph.D., has spent years looking into the links between diet and cancer. The evidence, she says, is consistent. Eating larger quantities of fruits and vegetables can lower the risk of certain cancers.

What hasn’t been demonstrated is whether dietary supplements derived from nutrients found in foods reduce the risk of cancer.

Lycopene is a good case in point. According to a study published in the International Journal of Cancer in 2001, women who ate two or more servings of tomato sauce per week had a 40 percent decrease in risk for ovarian cancer when compared to those who ate less than one serving a month.

Tomato sauce contains lycopene, an antioxidant also found in certain colorful fruits. It is thought that antioxidants inhibit the development of cancerous cells.

But does the evidence show that taking lycopene alone lowers the risk of cancer? Again, the answer is no. Dr. Kumar suggests there may be some “synergistic value” in consuming combinations of phytochemicals and vitamins in a “natural food source.”

Scientists have been studying the relationship between food and cancer for years, but what they have learned is still full of unknowns.

“Is there a magic food that will prevent cancer?” asks Thomas Sellers, Ph.D., executive vice president and director of Moffitt’s cancer prevention and control programs. “In my opinion the answer is no. I think it is clear that there are dietary patterns in certain parts of the world where they have lower rates of cancer. And the evidence suggests that when these populations move from one part of the world to another, their lower cancer rates don’t go with them. So, clearly, there is something beyond genetics that explains the geography of cancer rates. Diet would be one of the most obvious factors.”

But exactly which foods reduce the risk of cancer and what that means for the average eater is more complicated. “Rates of cancer tend to be lower in Asian countries,” says Dr. Sellers, “and Asian countries have a high consumption of soy. Is soy the reason the rates of cancer are lower? That is a testable hypothesis. But what we are learning is that a person’s age at time of exposure to soy could be very important. For instance, one study has shown that eating a lot of soy in adolescence is good and may lower the risk, but when you start as an adult, it may have no impact or actually increase your risk.”

“Since soy foods have a hormonal effect, clinical trials at Moffitt have demonstrated that these foods have different effects on men and women,” observes Dr. Kumar.

Another example of the complexity of the food-cancer connection is green tea. Studies of mice show that ingesting large quantities can substantially reduce the risk of prostate cancer. But according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, evidence of a link between green tea and lower cancer risk in humans is inconclusive.

Recently, Moffitt received a $3.6-million grant that may help researchers settle the controversy over green tea. The five-year study, led by Dr. Kumar, will focus on men with a high risk of prostate cancer who will be given a pure form of the substance in green tea thought to prevent cancer.

All of this interest in food and cancer reflects a change in the focus of health research in recent years. “What we are seeing,” says Dr. Sellers, “is a trend away from the question of what things are bad for you and may increase risk, versus what are the things that may actually be good, that we should be promoting”

So what is the take-home message from all of this exciting new research? Consumers may want to be wary of any claims of a magic ingredient for health.

“People like to do it the easy way,” says Dr. Kumar. “They simply want to take a pill they can pop every day, but this hasn’t been proven to work. Better advice would be to adopt a diet high in fiber and nutrients and low in fat. I recommend 8 to 10 servings of colorful fruits and vegetables each day.”


‘Tis the Season:
How to Survive Colds and Flu

There is no cure for the common cold, but there are some ways to avoid getting one, even during cold and flu season.

The best defense is to wash your hands regularly with warm, soapy water and to avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth with your hands—all ways that germs can get into your system. Get plenty of rest, eat right, exercise and quit smoking to boost your immune system and reduce upper respiratory tract infections.

Sometimes even the best defense isn’t enough to ward off a cold or flu. If you get sick, over-the-counter remedies coupled with warmth, plenty of fluids and a little time are the only weapons you have against a cold or flu virus. If you develop a bacterial infection at the same time, however, antibiotics can help—and the AAA Prescription Savings card can help you save an average of 20 percent on prescription medications at 59,000 (or 9 out of 10) locations nationwide.

If your doctor prescribes antibiotics, take all of them—even if you start feeling better. If you don’t, you may not have enough medication in your body to kill the germs, but you will probably have enough to help the germs learn to resist the medicine.

There is no cure for colds and flu, but there is no reason to make it easier for them, either.

You can find out more about healthy living on the AAA Prescriptions Savings website at AAA.com/prescriptions. In addition to information about saving money on your prescription medications, the site offers tools like a Daily Food Diary, Body Fat Calculator and much more.

Visit AAA.com/prescriptions to print your AAA Prescription Savings card and start saving today!

AAA Prescription Savings is not an insurance plan. Savings are only available at participating pharmacies. Your savings may vary by pharmacy, prescription strength, dosage and quantity. Savings figures are compared to the usual and customary prices and may include home delivery. The program administrator may obtain manufacturer rebates and other fees based on your prescription drugs. These rebates and other fees may be retained by the program administrator or shared with you and/or your pharmacy. Cannot be combined with any other discounts.


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Cancer by
the Numbers

According to the American Cancer Society, U.S. cancer death rates have declined dramatically in recent years thanks to better prevention and screening efforts, earlier detection methods, and more effective treatments.

The numbers have been dropping steadily since 1993, but in 2002 the rate of decline doubled, from 1.1 percent per year to 2.1 percent.

The recent Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer, a collaborative effort of the American Cancer Society, the National Cancer Institute, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries, notes that cancer death rates have decreased for the majority of the 15 most commonly diagnosed cancers.

There were significant declines in the three leading causes of cancer deaths in men—lung, prostate and colorectal—and two out of three of the leading causes of cancer death in women—colorectal and breast cancer. Death rates for lung cancer in women are still on the rise.

Other key statistics
in the report:
• New breast cancer diagnoses fell by 3.4 percent a year between 2001 and 2004, perhaps due to the decline in hormonal therapy or the fact that fewer women are getting mammograms.

• For women, incidence rates for all cancers combined stabilized from 1999 through 2004 after years of increases. However, rates for non-Hodgkins lymphoma, melanoma, leukemia, thyroid, and cancers of the bladder and kidney are increasing.

• For men, incidence rates for all cancers decreased by 4.3 percent from 1992 through 1995. But rates of myeloma and cancers of the liver, kidney and esophagus continued to increase.

• About 1.4 million new cancer cases (excluding noninvasive carcinoma) will be diagnosed in 2007. About 559,650 Americans will die.

• In 2006, the direct medical costs associated with cancer treatment were $78 billion dollars.

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