Researchers examined pooled data from 10 previous studies that
included a total of almost 1.45 million adults in Asia, Europe, and
the United States. After following people for an average of 8.6
years, 18,822 cases of lung cancer were documented.
Compared to people who never ate yogurt, those who consumed the most
yogurt were 19% less likely to develop lung cancer, the analysis
found.
People who had the most fiber in their diets, meanwhile, were 17%
less likely to develop lung cancer than those who ate the least
fiber.
And individuals with the highest fiber intake and highest yogurt
consumption were 33% less likely than those with the lowest
consumption of both to develop lung cancer, the study team reports
in JAMA Oncology.
"Our study suggests a potential novel health benefit of increasing
dietary fiber and yogurt intakes in lung cancer prevention," senior
study author Dr. Xiao-Ou Shu of Vanderbilt University Medical Center
in Nashville, Tennessee, and colleagues write.
While the study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove
yogurt or fiber protects against lung cancer, it's possible these
kinds of foods might lead to changes in the gut microbiota - the
bacteria living in our digestive tract - that help protect against
cancer, the study authors hypothesize.
It's also possible fiber and yogurt might help protect against
inflammation, which in turn helps reduce the potential for tumors to
develop, the researchers note.
Fiber-rich foods typically have lots of prebiotics, nondigestable
compounds that can be fermented in the gut and serve as food for
beneficial bacteria, the authors note. Yogurt has lots of those
beneficial bacteria, or probiotics.
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Considerable research links the gut microbiota to the immune system
overall. And some recent studies have suggested that the gut
microbiota may play a role in lung inflammation, the study authors
point out.
The reduced risk of lung cancer associated with fiber and yogurt in
the study persisted even after researchers accounted for smoking
habits.
For people who never smoked, the lung cancer risk reduction
associated with the highest levels of yogurt and fiber consumption
was 31%, while for smokers it was 24% and for former smokers, 34%.
The researchers point out that they didn't know what type of fiber
people consumed or which types of foods they ate to get their fiber,
or the type or fat content of any yogurt people ate.
They also lacked data on some other risk factors for lung cancer,
including low income or limited education levels as well as any
history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder.
Even so, the authors conclude it's worth considering the potential
protective effect of yogurt and fiber.
"For the first time to our knowledge, a potential synergistic
association between fiber and yogurt intakes on lung cancer risk was
observed," the study authors write. "Although further investigation
is needed to replicate these findings and disentangle the underlying
mechanisms, our study suggests a potential novel health benefit of
increasing dietary fiber and yogurt intakes in lung cancer
prevention."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2XBJ6LJ JAMA Oncology, online October 24,
2019.
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