Monday, December 21, 2009

CT Scans & Cancer Risk


Weekly Health Update:



CT Scans & Cancer Risk






"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."

By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS


Photo of Dr. Wascher

Updated: 12/20/2009




The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.


Welcome to Weekly Health Update


“A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers”

HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM WEEKLY HEALTH UPDATE!


CT SCANS & CANCER RISK


CT (computed tomography) scanners have revolutionized the practice of medicine since they were first introduced into routine clinical practice in 1974. CT scanners utilize a rotating x-ray device to create hundreds of individual images that can then be reconstructed into a complex three dimensional view of the body by computers. Current generation CT scanners are able to image the entire human body within seconds, and these high definition images provide physicians with an incredibly detailed view of the organs and tissues deep within us.

CT scanners have become an indispensible diagnostic tool within virtually every medical and surgical specialty, and an estimated 75 million CT scans are now performed annually in the United States, alone. As the popularity of these complex and powerful diagnostic imaging machines has continued to grow, so has their use for clinically dubious reasons. For example, routine scans of the heart, and its coronary arteries, have, increasingly, been used for “screening purposes” in patients without any clinical evidence of heart disease. Likewise, there has been an explosion in the number of private radiology imaging centers offering fee-based “body scans” for clinically healthy people who are interested in having their internal organs examined for any early signs of diseases that can be detected by CT scans. Another area of concern regarding the use of CT scanners is that physicians have become so dependent on these machines, and the exquisite images of the human body that they provide, that many (if not most) doctors have a very low threshold to order CT scans as a routine part of their diagnostic work-up of patients. (For example, in my own specialty of Surgery, the diagnosis of appendicitis is now routinely made with a CT scanner, rather than by the traditional method of the surgeon’s clinical evaluation of the patient.)

While CT scanners have become essential diagnostic tools, they also expose patients to much higher doses of radiation than most conventional x-ray examinations. It has long been known that exposure to radiation increases the risk of developing cancer, and that the risk of developing cancer is proportional to the dose of radiation received by patients. (Based upon recent estimates, it has been estimated that at least 2 percent of all cancer cases may be caused by prior exposure to medical x-rays.) Moreover, there is no known “safe” dose of radiation in terms of radiation-induced cancer risk. As if this was not already bad enough, there has been a growing concern regarding the actual dose of radiation that is being delivered to patients from CT scanners across the country, as there is a great deal of variability in the radiation dose settings being used among different CT scan imaging facilities. (This alarming point was recently brought to the public’s attention when it was revealed that Cedars Sinai Medical Center, a prestigious private hospital in the Beverly Hills area, was being investigated after multiple patients who had undergone CT scans of their brain there began to notice that their hair was falling out. Authorities subsequently determined that these patients had received grossly excessive radiation doses during their scans.)

Two very important public health studies have just been published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, and the findings of these two related studies have significantly raised the level of concern regarding the current use of CT scanners among public health experts.

The first of these two studies quantified the amount of radiation dose delivered to 1,119 patients for 11 common types of CT scan examinations that were performed at 4 different hospitals in the San Francisco area. In addition to calculating the radiation doses received by these patients, the authors also estimated the probable lifetime cancer risk associated with these CT scans. As the Cedars Sinai case has already shown, there appears to be considerable variability in the amount of radiation used at different institutions to conduct the same exact type of CT scan. However, the sheer magnitude of this variability in radiation doses, as measured by these researchers, is both mind-boggling and disturbing. Not only was there an enormous difference in radiation doses associated with performing the same exact type of CT scan between the 4 different institutions that were studied, but significant radiation exposure differences were also present within each individual institution when performing the same type of CT scan examination on different patients. When the researchers had finished their calculations, they noted an almost unbelievable 13-fold difference, on average, in radiation exposure for the same type of CT scan between the highest and lowest observed radiation doses for each individual type of CT examination.

Based largely upon cancer incidence data collected after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings, this clinical study’s researchers calculated that an estimated 1 in 270 women who underwent a CT scans of their coronary arteries at age 40 will eventually develop cancer as a direct result of these CT scans (versus 1 in 600 men), while 1 in 8,100 women who underwent CT scans of the brain at age 40 will develop cancer from these scans (versus 1 in 11,080 men). For men and women who underwent CT scans at age 20 (instead of age 40), the projected lifetime risk of CT scan-associated cancer was nearly double the projected risk of the 40 year-old patients.

The findings of this study indicate that the variability in radiation exposure between hospitals for the same type of CT scan examination is much greater than was previously believed. Perhaps even more surprising was the finding that identical CT scan examinations performed within a single hospital also subjected patients to significantly different amounts of radiation exposure. Finally, the calculated range of radiation exposure for CT scans revealed that, in general, patients are receiving far higher doses of radiation from routine CT scans than has generally been appreciated. (For example, a single CT coronary artery angiogram delivers the same amount of radiation as 310 chest x-rays!)

The second research study used public health data to estimate the average number of radiation-induced cancers caused by CT scans in the United States. Based upon current CT scan use, these researchers predicted that approximately 29,000 future cases of cancer could be expected to arise from CT scans performed in 2007 in the United States, resulting in approximately 15,000 deaths due to cancers caused directly by CT scans!

These two studies are eye-openers that should cause all of us, physicians and patients alike, to reconsider the benefits versus the risks of each and every CT scan that is considered before such scans are performed. Although most CT scans are performed because they offer vitally important clinical information on patients that could only otherwise be obtained by surgical exploration, too many CT scans are still being ordered and performed for far less compelling reasons (one of them being, unquestionably, the tendency of many physicians to order multiple unnecessary tests on patients as part of their practice of “defensive medicine,” in the absence of tort reform throughout most areas of the United States…). Moreover, the striking variation in CT-associated radiation doses, and the unexpectedly high level of these radiation doses in general, points to the need to improve standardization and compliance at every one of the thousands of institutions in the United States that operates a CT scanner.

As a dedicated cancer specialist, I am already well aware of the potential for radiation-induced cancers, and I have, for many years, tried to be very selective in ordering CT scans on my patients. In cases where I can gather the necessary clinical information without resorting to radiographic imaging, then I try to avoid obtaining any form of x-ray examination (including CT scans). In other cases, where I must obtain some sort of imaging examination, then I will often initially use ultrasound or MRI studies in place of CT scans, when appropriate. Even so, the dramatic findings of these two studies suggest to me that all physicians need to further decrease their routine use of CT scans whenever possible.



Disclaimer: As always, my advice to readers is to seek the advice of your physician before making any significant changes in medications, diet, or level of physical activity



Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a cancer researcher, an oncology consultant, and a widely published author




'


(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)




Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)





Bookmark and Share







Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:

rwascher@doctorwascher.net



Dr. Wascher's Biography


Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites





Copyright 2007 - 2010


Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS


All rights reserved






Dr. Wascher's Archives:



12-13-2009: Soy Isoflavones Decrease Breast Cancer Recurrence Risk


12-6-2009: Salt (Sodium) Intake, Stroke & Cardiovascular Disease


11-29-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-22-2009: Genistein (Soy Isoflavone) & Prostate Cancer


11-15-2009: Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain


1-8-2009: Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer






Dr. Wascher's Home Page





Monday, December 14, 2009

Soy Isoflavones Decrease Breast Cancer Recurrence Risk








Weekly Health Update:




Soy Isoflavones Decrease Breast Cancer Recurrence Risk





"A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers..."


By, Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS




Photo of Dr. Wascher




Updated: 12/13/2009




The information in this column is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or recommendations by the author. Please consult with your physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you have any other concerns regarding your health.



Welcome to Weekly Health Update







“A critical weekly review of important new research findings for health-conscious readers”


SOY ISOFLAVONES REDUCE BREAST CANCER RECURRENCE RISK


Regular readers of this column are already aware of the controversy surrounding soy isoflavone intake and breast cancer risk. As happens frequently in clinical research (unfortunately), contradictory research findings have made it difficult to understand the true relationship between dietary soy intake and breast cancer risk (if one exists). There is, for example, both laboratory and clinical data suggesting that a diet rich in soybean-derived products may be associated with a lower risk of developing breast cancer. At the same time, because genistein and other dietary isoflavones are known to weakly mimic the effects of estrogen, there has been some concern that a diet rich in isoflavone “phytoestrogens” may increase both the risk of developing a new breast cancer and the risk of developing a recurrence of a previous breast cancer. (In fact, there is data from laboratory research studies showing that genistein can indeed fuel the growth of human breast cancer cells growing in culture dishes, when exposed to high concentrations of this soy-derived isoflavone.)

A growing body of public health research, primarily from Asian countries where tofu and other soy-based foods are frequently consumed, appears to link increased soy consumption with a decreased lifetime breast cancer risk, particularly when soy-based foods are consumed during adolescence, during the time when development of the female breast is most active (Soy & Breast Cancer Risk). (Interestingly, there is also recent research suggesting that soy products might also reduce the risk of prostate cancer, which is another hormonally driven cancer: Genistein & Prostate Cancer Cells, Dietary Soy & Prostate Cancer Risk.)

Although epidemiological research is, increasingly, suggesting that a diet rich in soybean-derived foods might lower a woman’s lifetime risk of developing breast cancer, many breast cancer experts have remained apprehensive regarding dietary isoflavone intake in women with a prior history of breast cancer, in view of the estrogen-like effects of these “phytoestrogens.” As I have already noted, there is considerable research data available to suggest that soy-derived isoflavones can, at least under certain laboratory conditions, stimulate estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells to grow and divide. These research findings have left many oncologists feeling uncomfortable in recommending soy-based foods to their breast cancer patients. Now, a newly publish public health study in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that soy-based foods may actually reduce the risk of breast cancer recurrence, and death due to any cause, in women who have previously been diagnosed with this very common form of cancer.

In this study, which was performed in Shanghai, China, 5,042 female breast cancer survivors (ages 20 to 75 years) were followed for an average of almost 4 years. All of these patient volunteers underwent detailed surveys regarding their lifestyle habits, including their diets. These patients, who were originally diagnosed with breast cancer between 2002 and 2006, were surveyed at 6, 18, 36 and 60 months following their original diagnosis with breast cancer.

The results of this study indicate that the breast cancer survivors who consumed the greatest amount of soy-based foods in their daily diets were 32 percent less likely to experience a recurrence of their breast cancer when compared to the women who consumed the least amount of soy-based isoflavones. Moreover, the women who consumed the greatest amount of soy were also 29 percent less likely to die, from any cause, when compared to the women who consumed the least amount of soy-derived foods.

A particularly interesting and unexpected finding of this study was that both women with estrogen sensitive breast cancers and women with tumors that were not sensitive to estrogen appeared to experience a significantly decreased risk of breast cancer recurrence if they frequently consumed soy products. Another important finding of this study was that women who were taking the estrogen-blocking cancer treatment drug tamoxifen also appeared to enjoy a reduced risk of breast cancer recurrence with higher levels of dietary soy intake. Additionally, the researchers noted that high levels of soy intake appeared to be about as effective in reducing the risk of breast cancer recurrence as the breast cancer prevention drug tamoxifen, alone.

The results of this very important study mirror the findings of the only other prospective clinical study that has looked at the impact of soy-based foods on breast cancer recurrence (the “Life After Cancer Epidemiology,” or “LACE,” study). The LACE study, which was performed in the United States, followed nearly 2,000 breast cancer survivors for, on average, more than 6 years. In the LACE study, women who were taking tamoxifen, and who also consumed the highest amount of soy-based dietary isoflavones, were 50 percent less likely to develop a recurrence of their breast cancer when compared to women who reported the lowest consumption of soy-derived foods.

As I have pointed out previously, epidemiological research studies based upon dietary surveys are susceptible to several types of bias which, in turn, can cause researchers to draw the wrong conclusions. In this case, however, there are now two large prospective cohort studies that have reached essentially the same conclusions (albeit with a rather limited duration of patient follow-up). Both studies strongly suggest that high levels of soy-based isoflavones in the diet may be able to significantly reduce the risk of breast cancer recurrence. Based upon the findings of this large Chinese study, the apparent cancer risk reduction effect associated with high levels of soy intake also appears to benefit premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as women who are taking the estrogen-blocking drug tamoxifen, women with estrogen-sensitive tumors, and women with (counter-intuitively) estrogen-resistant tumors.

In view of the limited duration of patient follow-up in both of these clinical breast cancer studies, as well as the limitations of survey-based epidemiological research in general, I would like to see updated data from both of these studies after at least 10 years of patient observation before I would be willing to tell my breast cancer patients that they should significantly increase their dietary soy intake. On the other hand, the rather compelling data presented by both of these clinical research studies will also make me less anxious when any of my breast cancer patients decide, of their own accord, to increase their intake of soy-derived isoflavones.





Disclaimer: As always, my advice to readers is to seek the advice of your physician before making any significant changes in medications, diet, or level of physical activity



Dr. Wascher is an oncologic surgeon, a professor of surgery, a cancer researcher, an oncology consultant, and a widely published author




'


(Anticipated Publication Date: March 2010)



Link to TV36 Interview with Dr. Wascher


(Click above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)





Bookmark and Share



Send your feedback to Dr. Wascher at:

rwascher@doctorwascher.net



Dr. Wascher's Biography



Links to Other Health & Wellness Sites



http://doctorwascher.com



Copyright 2007 - 2010

Robert A. Wascher, MD, FACS

All rights reserved





Dr. Wascher's Archives:

12-6-2009: Salt (Sodium) Intake, Stroke & Cardiovascular Disease


11-29-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-22-2009: Genistein (Soy Isoflavone) & Prostate Cancer


11-15-2009: Breast Cancer Treatment & Chronic Pain


1-8-2009: Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-1-2009: Exercise & Prostate Cancer Risk


10-25-2009: HPV Virus & Risk of Breast Cancer


10-18-2009: Post-Cholecystectomy Syndrome (Symptoms after Gallbladder Surgery)


10-11-2009: Vitamin D & Falls in the Elderly


10-4-2009: Surgery, NSQIP, Complications & Death


9-27-2009 Stress, Heart Disease, Exercise & Death


9-20-2009: Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival


9-13-2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Update


9-7-2009: Green Tea, Aging & Lifespan


8-30-2009: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Diet & Fiber


8-23-2009: Update on Prostate Cancer and Cryotherapy


8-16-2009: Exercise Improves Lymphedema Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors


8-9-2009: Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death & Vitamin D


8-2-2009: Honesty, Dishonesty & Brain Function


7-26-2009: Coronary Artery CT Scans & Cancer Risk


7-19-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Ovarian Cancer


7-12-2009: Breast Cancer & Metformin (Glucophage)


7-5-2009: Prostate Cancer & Green Tea


6-28-2009: Air Pollution & the Risk of Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT)


6-21-2009: Red Yeast Rice, Statins & Cholesterol


6-14-2009: Bone Marrow Stem Cell Transplant & Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)


6-7-2009: Diet, Soy & Breast Cancer Risk


5-31-2009: Diet and Prostate Cancer Risk


5-24-2009: Diabetes, Glucose Control & Death


5-17-2009: Drug Company Marketing & Physician Prescribing Bias


5-10-2009: Hemorrhoids & Surgery


5-3-2009: Statin Drugs & Blood Clots (Thromboembolism)


4-26-2009: Are We Really Losing the War on Cancer?


4-19-2009: Exercise in Middle Age & Risk of Death


4-12-2009: Can Chronic Stress Harm Your Heart?


4-5-2009: Does PSA Testing for Prostate Cancer Save Lives?


3-22-2009: CABG Surgery vs. PCI in Diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease; Sweetened Beverages and Coronary Artery Disease


3-15-2009: Depression, Stress, Anger & Heart Disease


3-8-2009: Coronary Artery Disease: CABG vs. Stents?; Swimming Lessons & Drowning Risk in Children


3-1-2009: Aspirin & Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Fish Oil & Respiratory Infections in Children


2-22-2009: Health Differences Between Americans & Europeans; Lycopene & Prostate Cancer


2-15-2009: Statin Drugs & Death Rates; Physical Activity, Breast Cancer & Sex Hormones


2-8-2009: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer; Stool DNA Testing & Cancer of the Colon & Rectum


2-1-2009: Obesity and the Complications of Diverticulosis (Diverticulitis & Bleeding); Obesity, Weight Loss & Urinary Incontinence


1-25-2009: Prostate Cancer, Fatigue & Exercise; Does your Surgeon “Warm-up” Before Surgery?


1-18-2009: Cancer and Vitamins; Teenagers, MySpace and Risky Behaviors


1-11-2009: Exercise Reverses Some Effects of Fatty Meals; Vitamin C and Blood Pressure


1-4-2009: Secondhand Smoke & Heart Attack Risk; Poor Physical Fitness During Childhood & Heart Disease Risk During Adulthood


12-28-2008: Stress & Your Risk of Heart Attack; Vitamin D & the Prevention of Colon & Rectal Polyps


12-21-2008: Breast Cancer Incidence & Hormone Replacement Therapy; Circumcision & the Risk of HPV & HIV Infection


12-14-2008: Vitamin E, Vitamin C and Selenium Do Not Prevent Cancer; Postscript: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome


12-7-2008: Generic vs. Brand-Name Drugs, Stress & Breast Cancer Survival


11-30-2008: A Possible Cure for Down’s Syndrome?; Smoking & Cognitive Decline; Calcium & Vitamin D & Breast Cancer Risk


11-23-2008: Breast Cancer & Fish Oil; Lymphedema after Breast Cancer Treatment; Vasectomy & Prostate Cancer Risk


11-16-2008: Vitamin E & Vitamin C: No Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk; Does Lack of Sleep Increase Stroke & Heart Attack Risk in Hypertensive Patients?


11-9-2008: Statins Cut Heart Attack Risk Even with Normal Cholesterol Levels; Statins & PSA Level


11-2-2008: Radiation Treatment of Prostate Cancer & Second Cancers; Sexual Content on TV & Teen Pregnancy Risk


10-26-2008: Smoking & Quality of Life


10-19-2008: Agent Orange & Prostate Cancer


10-12-2008: Pomegranate Juice & Prostate Cancer


10-5-2008: Central Obesity & Dementia; Diet, Vitamin D, Calcium, & Colon Cancer


9-28-2008: Publication & Citation Bias in Favor of Industry-Funded Research?


9-21-2008: Does Tylenol® (Acetaminophen) Cause Asthma?


9-14-208: Arthroscopic Knee Surgery- No Better than Placebo?; A Healthy Lifestyle Prevents Stroke


8-23-2008: Alcohol Abuse Before & After Military Deployment; Running & Age; Running & Your Testicles


8-12-2008: Green Tea & Diabetes; Breastfeeding & Adult Cholesterol Levels; Fish Oil & Senile Macular Degeneration


8-3-2008: Exercise & Weight Loss; Green Tea, Folic Acid & Breast Cancer Risk; Foreign Language Interpreters & ICU Patients


7-26-2008: Viagra & Sexual Function in Women; Patient-Reported Adverse Hospital Events; Curcumin & Pancreatic Cancer


7-13-2008: Erectile Dysfunction & Frequency of Sex; Muscle Strength & Mortality in Men; Cryoablation for Prostate Cancer


7-6-2008: Sleep, Melatonin & Breast Cancer Risk; Mediterranean Diet & Cancer Risk; New Treatment for Varicose Veins


6-29-2008: Bone Marrow Stem Cells & Liver Failure; Vitamin D & Colorectal Cancer Survival; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


6-22-2008: Obesity, Lifestyle & Heart Disease; Effects of Lifestyle & Nutrition on Prostate Cancer; Ginkgo Biloba, Ulcerative Colitis & Colorectal Cancer


6-15-2008: Preventable Deaths after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) & St. John’s Wort


6-8-2008: Vitamin D & Prostate Cancer Risk; Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) of Kidney (Renal) Cancer; Antisense Telomerase & Cancer


6-2-2008: Acute Coronary Syndrome- Do You Know the Symptoms?; Green Tea & Lung Cancer; Episiotomy & Subsequent Deliveries- An Unkind Cut


5-25-2008: Early Childhood Screening Predicts Later Behavioral Problems; Psychiatric Disorders Among Parents of Autistic Children; Social & Psychiatric Profiles of Young Adults Born Prematurely


5-18-2008: Can Statins Reverse Coronary Artery Disease?; Does Breast Ultrasound Improve Breast Cancer Detection?; Preventive Care Services at Veterans Administration (VA) Medical Centers


5-11-2008: Smoking Cessation & Risk of Death; Childhood Traumas & Adult Suicide Risk; “White Coat Hypertension” & Risk of Cardiovascular Disease


5-4-2008: Super-Size Me: Fast Food’s Effects on Your Liver; Exercise, Weight & Coronary Artery Disease; Contamination of Surgical Instruments in the Operating Room


4-27-2008: Stents vs. Bypass Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease; The “DASH” Hypertension Diet & Cardiovascular Disease Prevention; Testosterone Therapy for Women with Decreased Sexual Desire & Function


4-20-2008: BRCA Breast Cancer Mutations & MRI Scans; Bladder Cancer Prevention with Broccoli?; Diabetes: Risk of Death Due to Heart Attack & Stroke


4-13-2008: Breast Cancer Recurrence & Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Carotid Artery Disease: Surgery vs. Stents?; Statin Drugs & Cancer Prevention


4-6-2008: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Pap Smear Results & Cervical Cancer; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Infection & Oral Cancer; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & the Risk of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD)


3-30-2008: Abdominal Obesity & the Risk of Death in Women; Folic Acid Pretreatment & Heart Attacks; Pancreatic Cancer Regression after Injections of Bacteria


3-23-2008: Age of Transfused Blood & Risk of Complications after Surgery; Obesity, Blood Pressure & Heart Size in Children


3-16-2008: Benefits of a Full Drug Coverage Plan for Medicare Patients?; Parent-Teen Conversations about Sex; Soy (Genistein) & Prostate Cancer


3-9-2008: Flat Colorectal Adenomas & Cancer; Health Risks after Stopping Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT); Television, Children & Obesity


3-2-2008: Medication & Risk of Death After Heart Attack; Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Mammogram Results; Selenium: Cancer, Heart Disease & Death


2-23-2008: Universal Healthcare Insurance Study; Glucosamine & Arthritis


2-17-2008: Exceptional Longevity in Men; Testosterone & Risk of Prostate Cancer; Smoking & Pre-malignant Colorectal Polyps


2-10-2008: Thrombus Aspiration from Coronary Arteries; Intensive Management of Diabetes & Death; Possible Cure for Down's Syndrome?


2-3-2008: Vitamin D & Cardiovascular Health; Vitamin D & Breast Cancer; Green Tea & Colorectal Cancer


1-27-2008: Colorectal Cancer, Esophageal Cancer & Pancreatic Cancer: Update from the 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology's Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium


1-20-2008: Testosterone Levels & Risk of Fractures in Elderly Men; Air Pollution & DNA Damage in Sperm; Statins & Trauma Survival in the Elderly


1-12-2008: Statins, Diabetes & Stroke and Obesity; GERD & Esophageal Cancer


1-7-2008: Testosterone Supplements in Elderly Men; Colorectal Cancer-- Reasons for Poor Compliance with Screening Recommendations


12-31-2007: Minority Women, Hormone Replacement Therapy & Breast Cancer; Does Health Insurance Improve Health?


12-23-2007: Is Coffee Safe After a Heart Attack?; Impact of Divorce on the Environment; Hypertension & the Risk of Dementia; Emotional Vitality & the Risk of Heart Disease


12-16-2007: Honey vs. Dextromethorphan vs. No Treatment for Kids with Night-Time Cough, Acupuncture & Hot Flashes in Women with Breast Cancer, Physical Activity & the Risk of Death, Mediterranean Diet & Mortality


12-11-2007: Bias in Medical Research; Carbon Nanotubes & Radiofrequency: A New Weapon Against Cancer?; Childhood Obesity & Risk of Adult Heart Disease


12-2-2007: Obesity & Risk of Cancer; Testosterone Level & Risk of Death; Drug Company Funding of Research & Results; Smoking & the Risk of Colon & Rectal Cancer







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