Milliron Brandy-Joe, Bruneau Michael, Obeid Elias, Gross Laura, Bealin Lisa, Smaltz Christa, Giri Veda N
Department of Nutrition Sciences, College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Department of Health Sciences, College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Prostate. 2019 May;79(7):778-783. doi: 10.1002/pros.23783. Epub 2019 Mar 24.
Genetic counseling (GC) and genetic testing (GT) for prostate cancer (PCA) is a rapidly growing, affording opportunity for healthy lifestyle promotion in men aligned with cancer survivorship and cancer prevention goals. We conducted a targeted dietary analysis of men undergoing GC/GT for PCA for adherence to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Pattern recommendations which align with preventing cancer and recurrences in the Genetic Evaluation of Men (GEM) study at two academic centers to inform future strategies for diet intervention.
Participants of GEM with PCA or at-risk for PCA completed a structured food frequency questionnaire indicating number of servings consumed per day or per week of fruits, vegetables, red meat, seafood, processed meat, and foods high in saturated fat. Adherence to the USDA recommendations was assessed for the total sample and by PCA status and aggressiveness, family history, and body mass index (BMI) through χ contingency analyses. One-sample t tests were used to compare the dietary behaviors of men to USDA Recommendations. Levels of α were set a priori at P < 0.05.
Of 239 males undergoing GC on the study, surveys were completed by 197 men (82.4%), and complete survey data was available on 113 men (47.3%). By the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention BMI classification, 82.3% of the cohort was overweight (45.1%) or obese (37.2%). GEM participants reported consuming less fruits (P = 0.015), less vegetables ( P < 0.001), less seafood ( P < 0.001), more processed meats ( P < 0.001), and more foods high in saturated fats ( P < 0.001) than recommended.
A high proportion of men receiving GC/GT for PCA were overweight and/or obese with lack of adherence to national diet recommendations for cancer risk and recurrence, affording a teachable moment and supporting the systematic focus of introducing nutrition intervention during GC to promote survivorship.
前列腺癌(PCA)的遗传咨询(GC)和基因检测(GT)发展迅速,为男性促进健康生活方式提供了机会,这与癌症幸存者和癌症预防目标相一致。我们针对在两个学术中心接受PCA的GC/GT的男性进行了有针对性的饮食分析,以评估他们对美国农业部(USDA)食物模式建议的遵守情况,这些建议与男性遗传评估(GEM)研究中的癌症预防和复发相关,从而为未来的饮食干预策略提供参考。
GEM中患有PCA或有PCA风险的参与者完成了一份结构化的食物频率问卷,表明每天或每周食用水果、蔬菜、红肉、海鲜、加工肉类和高饱和脂肪食物的份数。通过χ²列联分析,对总样本以及按PCA状态、侵袭性、家族史和体重指数(BMI)评估对USDA建议的遵守情况。使用单样本t检验将男性的饮食行为与USDA建议进行比较。α水平预先设定为P < 0.05。
在该研究中接受GC的239名男性中,197名男性(82.4%)完成了调查,113名男性(47.3%)有完整的调查数据。根据疾病控制和预防中心的BMI分类,该队列中82.3%超重(45.1%)或肥胖(37.2%)。GEM参与者报告称,他们食用的水果(P = 0.015)、蔬菜(P < 0.001)、海鲜(P < 0.001)较少,加工肉类(P < 0.001)和高饱和脂肪食物(P < 0.001)比建议的更多。
接受PCA的GC/GT的男性中很大一部分超重和/或肥胖,未遵守关于癌症风险和复发的国家饮食建议,这提供了一个可教育的时机,并支持在GC期间系统地关注引入营养干预以促进生存。