Soy foods show benefit to young breast cancer patients
Diets high in soy foods are associated with a decreased risk of osteoporotic bone fractures in pre-menopausal breast cancer survivors, according to a new study published in the journal JNCI Cancer Spectrum.
Researchers here studied the impact that body mass index (BMI), exercise, and soy food consumption had on bone fracture rates among breast cancer survivors. The study used data from the Shanghai Breast Cancer Survival Study of 5,042 newly diagnosed breast cancer survivors between the ages of 20 and 75.
Researchers collected detailed information at enrollment, including cancer diagnosis and treatment history, medication use, dietary habits, exercise and other lifestyle factors. About 52 percent of women in the study were postmenopausal. Patients then had follow-up visits at 18 months, and three, five, and 10 years after their diagnosis to update exposure and outcome information.
Throughout the 10-year study period, 3.6 percent of survivors reported an osteoporotic bone fracture. Higher soy intake was associated with a 77 percent reduced risk of osteoporotic fractures in younger women, and exercise showed a significantly reduced risk of fractures among older women, the study said.
Consistent with prior studies, the extended use of tamoxifen, a drug that is prescribed for breast cancer patients showed a 37 percent reduced risk of fractures in the overall study population. Tamoxifen is a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) that causes an increase in bone mineral density. Soy based foods, which are rich in isoflavones, provide a natural SERM.
Breast cancer is the second most common cancer among women in the United States, with 1 in 8 women diagnosed with it during their lifetime. Many treatments for breast cancer can cause premature menopause and decrease bone mineral density. This leads to a higher incidence of osteoporosis-related fractures among survivors compared to healthy women in the same age range, and yet many factors connected to this increase in fracture risks are understudied, according to Evelyn Hsieh, MD, PhD, assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut and lead author of the study.
"The menopausal transition is known to be a period of high risk for bone loss and, given the relative scarcity of data related to fracture risk among younger women with breast cancer, this study marks an important contribution to this body of literature," said Hsieh in a press statement. "Our findings, in particular regarding the protective effects of soy food consumption provide novel insight into how future interventions can be best tailored to different risk groups."
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