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CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, Vol 49, Issue 6 353-361, Copyright © 1999 by American Cancer Society
T. Byers
Randomized controlled trials are regarded as the most definitive of study
designs. The randomized controlled trials that have tested nutritional
factors for cancer prevention are reviewed. Trials that have tested the
effects of nutrients given as high-dose supplements have been largely
disappointing, typically showing either no or harmful effects. Possible
benefits of vitamin E for prostate cancer prevention and selenium for
prostate, colorectal, and lung cancer prevention have emerged only as
secondary endpoints in trials conducted for other purposes; confirmatory
new trials for these nutrients are now underway or are planned. The
limitations of both past and current randomized controlled trials for
studying diet-cancer relationships are discussed. The disappointing
findings that have emerged from short-term studies of high-dose supplements
cannot be interpreted as direct tests of the diet-cancer relationship
because high-dose supplements cannot fully simulate the effects of whole
foods on cancer risk. As we await findings from current and future trials,
we should not forget that the ample evidence from observational
epidemiologic research--suggesting that diets rich in fruits and vegetables
can reduce the risk of many of the most common cancers--can provide a sound
basis for nutritional recommendations aimed at reducing cancer risk.
ARTICLES
What can randomized controlled trials tell us about nutrition and cancer prevention?
Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, CO, USA.
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