Low carb / high protein diet & breast tumors in mice
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=21673053
Cancer Res. 2011 Jun 14. [Epub ahead of print]
A Low Carbohydrate, High Protein Diet Slows Tumor Growth and Prevents Cancer Initiation.
Ho VW, Leung K, Hsu A, Luk B, Lai J, Shen SY, Minchinton AI, Waterhouse D, Bally MB, Lin W, Nelson BH, Sly LM, Krystal G.
SourceAuthors' Affiliations: The Terry Fox Laboratory, BC Cancer Research Centre, BC Cancer Agency; Department of Pediatrics, Division of Gastroenterology, BC Children's Hospital & University of British Columbia, Vancouver; Radiation Biology Unit-Department of Integrative Oncology and Department of Experimental Therapeutics, BC Cancer Research Centre, and Deeley Research Centre, BC Cancer Agency, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Abstract
Since cancer cells depend on glucose more than normal cells, we compared the effects of low carbohydrate (CHO) diets to a Western diet on the growth rate of tumors in mice. To avoid caloric restriction-induced effects, we designed the low CHO diets isocaloric with the Western diet by increasing protein rather than fat levels because of the reported tumor-promoting effects of high fat and the immune-stimulating effects of high protein. We found that both murine and human carcinomas grew slower in mice on diets containing low amylose CHO and high protein compared with a Western diet characterized by relatively high CHO and low protein.
There was no weight difference between the tumor-bearing mice on the low CHO or Western diets. Additionally, the low CHO-fed mice exhibited lower blood glucose, insulin, and lactate levels. Additive antitumor effects with the low CHO diets were observed with the mTOR inhibitor CCI-779 and especially with the COX-2 inhibitor Celebrex, a potent anti-inflammatory drug. Strikingly, in a genetically engineered mouse model of HER-2/neu-induced mammary cancer, tumor penetrance in mice on a Western diet was nearly 50% by the age of 1 year whereas no tumors were detected in mice on the low CHO diet.
This difference was associated with weight gains in mice on the Western diet not observed in mice on the low CHO diet. Moreover, whereas only 1 mouse on the Western diet achieved a normal life span, due to cancer-associated deaths, more than 50% of the mice on the low CHO diet reached or exceeded the normal life span.
Taken together, our findings offer a compelling preclinical illustration of the ability of a low CHO diet in not only restricting weight gain but also cancer development and progression.
Cancer Res; 71(13); 4484-93. ©2011 AACR.
PMID: 21673053
LQ
Comments
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Well, sort of--just go easyrobang13 said:Guess I can go back on
Guess I can go back on Atkins then?
Angela
Well, sort of--just go easy on the fat.
LQ0 -
Not a big fat eater. Used toLaundryQueen said:Well, sort of--just go easy
Well, sort of--just go easy on the fat.
LQ
Not a big fat eater. Used to be : ) I just have to stay away from carbs, they blow me up! At first I had heard that this kind of diet was bad for BC so i have gone off it while in treatment and of course gained weight. Now I can go back on and maybe drop a few pounds if the tamoxifen will let me!0 -
Go organicrobang13 said:Not a big fat eater. Used to
Not a big fat eater. Used to be : ) I just have to stay away from carbs, they blow me up! At first I had heard that this kind of diet was bad for BC so i have gone off it while in treatment and of course gained weight. Now I can go back on and maybe drop a few pounds if the tamoxifen will let me!
I think there probably are a lot of hormones that you want to avoid in meat & dairy unless you stick to organic varieties. Low carb is definitely the way to cut down on inflammation (shown to promote all cancers).
LQ0
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