Fruits May Protect Children from Leukemia
U.S. investigators have found that children
who ate oranges and bananas or drank orange juice most days of
the week before age 2 were significantly less likely than other
children to be diagnosed with leukemia before age 14.
Previous research has suggested
that diet may influence the risk of certain cancers, including
colorectal, prostate, lung and breast cancers.
Before age 15, more children become
sick from leukemia than from any other type of cancer. However,
the effect of diet on the childhood risk of this cancer remains
largely unknown.
To investigate, Dr. Marilyn L.
Kwan of the University of California, Berkeley, and her colleagues
interviewed the mothers of 328 children diagnosed with leukemia
and the same number of cancer-free kids. Mothers reported what
children ate before age 2.
The leukemia cases and cancer-free
children breastfed for a similar amount of time, and weighed roughly
the same at birth.
The researchers found that children
who age oranges or bananas 4 to 6 times per week were around half
as likely to develop leukemia before age 14. Drinking orange juice
between 4 and 6 times per week reduced leukemia risk by a comparable
amount, the team reports in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
Kwan noted that cured meats such
as lunch meats and hot dogs contain substances that can become
carcinogenic in the stomach, and research in rats suggests that
eating these meats in pregnancy may increase the risk of brain
tumors in offspring.
However, in this report, eating
hot dogs or lunch meats had no influence on leukemia, perhaps
because vitamin C, along with other vitamins contained in fruit,
protect the body from the damage the meats can cause, Kwan suggested.
"Perhaps in our study population
of California children, child's early consumption of oranges and
orange juice, foods which contain large amounts of vitamin C,
hindered carcinogenesis," she stated.
Kwan added that more research is
needed to investigate whether vitamin C protects against other
types of cancer, and whether other foods, such as vegetables,
can also protect kids from leukemia.
SOURCE: American Journal of Epidemiology,
December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
December 17, 2004
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