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Thread: THE TRUTH ABOUT VITAMIN D AND CANCER - THE WHOLE STORY




THE TRUTH ABOUT VITAMIN D AND CANCER - THE WHOLE STORY
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2006-04-09 09:01:18
THE TRUTH ABOUT VITAMIN D AND CANCER - THE WHOLE STORY




Two studies, presented this week at a meeting of the American Association
for Cancer Research confirm vitamin D's cancer protective role. In the
first, high levels of vitamin D translated to a 50 percent lower risk of
breast cancer. Even modestly higher levels resulted in 10 percent less risk,
which would translate to 5,000 fewer cases a year if it were true for all
British women.

The second study found that women who spent time outdoors or got a lot of
vitamin D from their diets or supplements, or spent a lot of time outdoors,
especially as teenagers, were a third as likely to develop breast cancer
than women with less of the nutrient. "Exposure to vitamin D at the time
breasts are developing, particularly around adolescence, might be
important," said lead researcher Julia Knight of Mount Sinai Hospital in
Toronto

These results support the recent review of evidence by Dr Cedric Garland and
colleagues from the University of California who analysed the results of 63
studies on vitamin D and its association with cancers of the colon, breast,
prostate and ovary. Twenty out of 30 studies published in the American
Journal of Public Health alone found a statistically significant benefit of
vitamin D for reducing risk of colon cancer or pre-cancerous colon polyps,
breast cancer, prostate cancer risk and ovarian cancer.

What these studies show is that an intake of 25mcg - that's five times the
RDA - confers the best protection against these cancers. These cancers
account for the majority of cancer deaths. Yet studies indicate that vitamin
D could cut risk by up to 50%. That means that the simple action of upping
vitamin D intake could literally save hundreds of thousands of lives at a
cost of little more than 5p a day.

Vitamin D's anti-cancer power is due to its ability to block the growth of
new blood vessels that allow tumours to grow, a process known as
angiogenesis. It also helps healthy cells stick together by "enhancing
intercellular communication through gap junctions, thereby strengthening the
inhibition of cancer cell growth that results from tight physical contact
with adjacent cells within a tissue," according to Garland.

The RDA for vitamin D, which is based largely on what you need for healthy
bones, it is woefully inadequate for cancer prevention. In fact, the chances
are that even if you're taking supplements with higher-than-RDA-levels,
you're
probably still not getting nearly enough. There is also the assumption that
you can make enough vitamin D if you have enough sun exposure. What this
study shows is that vitamin D deficiency exists even in sunny Southern
California - and may be made worse by too much sunscreen, hats and
protective clothing.

So what does this mean to you in terms of diet and supplements? The average
dietary intake is 4mcg, but this is based largely on a fish-free diet since
most people eat very little. So what should you do?

EAT FISH: The best dietary way to up your Vitamin D in take is to eat fish.
A 100g (3.5oz) serving of salmon or mackerel provides around 9mcg, and a
100g can of sardines provides 7.5mcg. I always recommend eating oily fish
such as these three times a week.

EAT EGGS: An egg provides about 1mcg - slightly more if it's an omega-3-rich
egg such as Columbus or Intelligent Eating eggs, and slightly less if it
isn't.
I always recommend eating six eggs a week. Milk is also a good source of
vitamin D (a glass of milk provides 2.5mcg) but I don't recommend it because
increased milk consumption is associated with increased risk of these
cancers.

If you follow my recommendations you'll probably achieve close to 6.4mcg a
day.

Miriam Nelson, professor of nutrition at Tufts University and author of
Strong Women, Strong Bones, recommends exposing your skin (arms and legs,
not face) without sunscreen to the sun for about 10 to 15 minutes a day,
which provides the equivalent to about 5mcg of vitamin D.

So food plus sun can provide around 11.4mcg a day. With the ideal intake
being 25mcg, that leaves a shortfall of 13.6mcg a day. The better,
high-potency multivitamins provide 5mcg. So the chances are that if you're
taking a multi, have a good diet and spend time outside, your total intake
is around 17.5mcg. That leaves a shortfall of around 7.5mcg - or 12.5mcg if
you don't get the sun exposure. This amount is worth supplementing.

If you are taking a bone-friendly formula, this might well provide the extra
7.5mcg. Otherwise it's worth adding a vitamin D supplement. You can buy
supplements of vitamin D in health food stores that provide 25mcg. Since
vitamin D is stored in the body (rather than being excreted daily, like
water-soluble vitamins), taking two 25mcg tablets a week would make up the
shortfall. There are no safety concerns with vitamin D - even at levels ten
times higher than this.

I'm sure this research will have the effect of increasing the amounts put in
supplements from the current 5mcg to 12.5mcg and certainly doubly emphasizes
the need to eat fish.

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