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Exercise
and Dietary Changes Can Kill Prostate Cancer Cells
UCLA Scientists Report

UCLA scientists report that 11 days of daily
exercise and the Pritikin low-fat, high-fiber diet induce prostate cancer cells
to die.
The research, published in the new issue of the journal Cancer Causes and
Control, is the first to show that diet and exercise can kill prostate cancer
cells.
"You can make changes in a short period of time that have a dramatic impact
on your health — in this case, on the growth and death of prostate tumor
cells," said R. James Barnard, professor of physiological science at UCLA
and lead investigator on the study.
Barnard and his UCLA colleagues studied two groups of men: 14 obese men, ages 42
to 73, without prostate cancer, who participated in an 11-day diet and exercise
program at the Pritikin Longevity Center; and 8 men, ages 38 to 74, who have
exercised regularly and followed a low-fat, high-fiber diet for more than 14
years.
The researchers — who also include Tung Ngo and Christopher Tymchuk, UCLA
graduate students working in Barnard's laboratory; Pinchas Cohen, a researcher
at UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center and professor of pediatrics at UCLA's David
Geffen School of Medicine; and William Aronson, a researcher at UCLA's Jonsson
Cancer Center and an associate clinical professor in the Department of Urology
at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine — collected blood serum samples from
the 14 men before they began the 11-day Pritikin program. At UCLA, the
researchers mixed these serum samples in dishes with prostate cancer cells. At
the end of the 11-day program, the researchers collected a second set of blood
serum samples from the same 14 men, and placed these samples in laboratory
dishes with prostate cancer cells.
Prostate
Cancer Cell Death
Among the 14 men at the beginning of their diet and exercise program, fewer than
three percent of the LNCaP cells — prostate cancer cells — in the cell
culture showed apoptosis (programmed cell
death). At the conclusion of the 11-day
program, more than 40 percent of these cells were on their way to death, and in
the 14-year group of eight men, more than 50 percent of these cells were on
their way to apoptosis, or death.
"That was the finding that made our jaws drop," Barnard said. "We
don't know yet whether these dramatic changes that occurred to prostate cancer
cells cultured in a laboratory will also occur in patients; we have hope that
these changes will occur."
In an attempt to understand what might be inducing the apoptosis of the tumor
cells, the scientists measured blood serum levels of a hormone called IGF-I,
which stimulates tumor cells to grow; a high level of IGF-I is a risk factor for
prostate cancer, Barnard said.
At the end of the 11 days, IGF-I levels for the 14 men had decreased by 20
percent. The eight men who had followed the diet and exercise program for 14
years had IGF-I levels 55 percent lower than the 14 men had at the start of
their diet and exercise program.
"Insulin is the primary factor that stimulates the liver to produce
IGF-I," Barnard said. "In previous research, we have shown that diet
and exercise lower the serum insulin level; we suspected that diet and exercise
should lower the IGF-I level as well, and we have found that to be true."
While IGF-I floats in the bloodstream, it binds to a protein, IGFBP-I, which
limits the amount of IGF-I that is available to interact with tissue. Higher
levels of this binding protein are desirable, causing a drop in free IGF-I
levels, Barnard said.
Over the 11-day program, IGFBP-I levels increased by 53 percent, while in the
long-term group of eight men, IGFBP-I levels were 150 percent higher than the
short-term group had at the outset of the program.
"We didn't expect the results would be this dramatic," Barnard said.
"We found dramatic changes in both IGF-I and IGFBP-I levels with diet and
exercise. The important message is you can change your levels of both IGF-I and
IGFBP-I in a very short period of time, and that may have an important impact on
your prostate health."
Implications of the Research
"I've been telling people for years if they want to avoid most of the
health problems we have in this country, they should go on a low-fat, high-fiber
diet and do about an hour of aerobic exercise every day," Barnard said.
"You make up your mind: Do you want to be healthy? It's not a tough
choice."
Barnard,
65, has worked with the Pritikin Longevity Center since 1978, and serves as a
consultant. He weighs five pounds less than when he graduated from college, and
his cholesterol dropped from 235 when he was in his early 40s to 180 when he
changed his diet; he has maintained his cholesterol around 180–190 for more
than 20 years.
The Pritikin program focuses on a diet of whole grains, fruits and vegetables,
and small portions of meat (no more than 3-and-a-half ounces a day), and 60
minutes of exercise a day.
Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer in American men, other than
skin cancer, and the second leading cause of cancer death in men, exceeded only
by lung cancer. Some 30,000 men in the United States die of prostate cancer each
year.
Barnard noted that some people buy growth hormone supplements, which stimulate
the production of IGF-I. He "seriously questions" older people taking
such supplements.
"Where you need IGF-I is in your muscle; the way to get it is to
exercise," Barnard said. "People want the easy way out; they want to
take a pill."
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Prostate cancer, PSA, Diet
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Cancer, Exercise and Dietary Changes Can Kill
Prostate Cancer Cells, UCLA scientists report that 11 days of daily exercise and
the Pritikin low-fat, high-fiber diet induce prostate cancer cells to die, diet
and exercise can kill prostate cancer cells, Prostate cancer cell death,
prostate cancer cells — in the cell culture showed apoptosis (programmed cell
death), apoptosis of the tumor cells,
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