Prostate Cancer Scientific Abstracts - F. Dalais
Welcome to the Prostate Cancer Guide scientific abstracts, author section F. Dalais.
This section is recommended for people who have a scientific interest in prostate cancer. It is recommended that people without prior knowledge of prostate cancer visit the more general areas of the site (Prostate Cancer Guide).
Selected Dalais prostate cancer abstracts
Journal: Urology
Pubmed ID: 15351581
Authors: Dalais FS, Meliala A, Wattanapenpaiboon N, Frydeberg M, Suter DA, Thomson WK, Wahlqvist ML.Title: Effects of a diet rich in phytoestrogens on prostate-specific antigen and sex hormones in men diagnosed with prostate cancer.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the effects of diets rich in soy and linseed compared
with a control diet on biochemical markers of prostate cancer in men diagnosed
with prostate cancer.
METHODS: Twenty-nine men diagnosed with prostate cancer and scheduled to undergo a radical prostatectomy were randomized to one of three groups: soy (high phytoestrogen), soy and linseed (high phytoestrogen), or wheat (low phytoestrogen). A bread was specially manufactured to incorporate 50 g of heat-treated (HT) soy grits or 50 g of HT soy grits and 20 g of linseed as part of the study participant's daily diet. Baseline and preoperative levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), free PSA, testosterone, sex hormone-binding globulin, free androgen index, and dihydrotestosterone were measured.
RESULTS: Statistically significant differences were detected between the HT soy grits group and the control wheat group for the percentage of change in total PSA (-12.7% versus 40%, P = 0.02) and the percentage of change in free/total PSA ratio (27.4% versus -15.6%, P = 0.01); and between the HT soy grits group and the HT soy grits and linseed group for the percentage of change in free androgen index (16.4% versus -15.5%, P = 0.04) and the percentage of change in free/total PSA ratio (27.4% versus -10%, P = 0.007).
CONCLUSIONS: The data from this study
indicate that a daily diet containing four slices of a bread rich in HT soy
grits favorably influences the PSA level and the free/total PSA ratio in
patients with prostate cancer. This work provides some evidence to support
epidemiologic studies claiming that male populations who consume high
phytoestrogen diets have a reduced risk of prostate cancer development and
progression.
Contact: International Health and Development Unit, Monash University, Clayton, VIC,
Australia.