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Dietary supplements |
A health diet should concentrates on substantial whole foods and not supplements which attempt to concentrate separate anti-cancer constituents of food into convenient tablets or potions. Although the concept of a quick fix oral supplement is attractive, as we all know, life is unfortunately not that simple, especially when considering the integrate genetic and constantly changing biochemical cancer pathways.
There may be other concerns about supplements compared to concentrating on whole healthy foods. Some of the large trials have shown that upsetting the dietary balance of nature and taking too much of a good thing, may be harmful both in terms of cancer and other important illnesses such a heart disease and strokes. Although there is still much to learn from ongoing studies, I and many enthusiasts have considerable reservations that supplements, in some situation, could do more harm than good.
Summary of concerns with oral dietary supplements:-
Is there a place for dietary supplements? The concerns about do not necessarily insinuate there is no place at all for supplements. Instead it emphasises that caution should be taken, especially if long term consumption may take place of a “one tablet fits all” where chemicals if not excreted fast enough could accumulate in the body. There is likely to be a place for good quality supplements after cancer but further evidence from ongoing clinical trials is required. It is also likely that more individualised supplements are necessary along with close monitoring of their ongoing effects. The existing trial data already suggest that correcting a pre-existing deficit such as zinc or selenium has anti cancer benefits but overcorrecting a normal value is counterproductive. Ideally future trial design should include bespoke blood, urine, saliva or toe nail analysis to identify those individuals with sub-clinical deficiencies in trace elements and vitamins, which may lead to an increase risk or progression of cancer especially under circumstances of high carcinogen exposure. The level and type of dietary supplements for each individual are also likely to differ considerably depending on patient’s dietary history and genetic susceptibility.
A start to developing an individualised supplementation system would be to simply measure blood levels of vitamins, minerals and essential fatty acid levels although these have not always reliably been found to reflect the true status of individual requirements. Sensitivity can be helped by dietary questionnaires and in-depth face to face consultations but this may not always be practical. The future, however, may well lay in more complex tests which match the blood levels of essential nutrients with specific biochemical pathways which in turn reflect the molecular makeup of each individual. This may even include an analysis of their genetic signature (the pattern of genes in their DNA). This is a long way from picking up a bottle of multivitamin from the shelf of the local drug store. The cost and inconvenience of these tests are currently prohibitive, but if genetic testing advances at the rate it is doing currently this may not be too much of a fantasy. In the mean time there are some bespoke tests which are currently accessible but are not freely available outside specialist, and expensive nutrition clinics or trial units. These include; measurements of serum metabolites that accumulate in vitamin deficiencies instead of vitamins themselves providing a longer term view rather than a snap shot at that time; or chemical blood markers that measure the baseline oxidative state (BOS) which is thought to reflect the body’s ability to fight off the free radicals correlating with the function of the primary oxidative defence enzymes, such as catalase, glutathione S-tranferase glutathione and superoxide dimutase.
Further general information Your doctors and specialist nurses are in an ideal position to give you relevant information on your disease and treatment as they know your individual circumstances. Cancerbackup has a help line (0808 800 1234) and a prize winning video available in English, Italian, Urdu, Bengali, Gujarati & Hindi explaining Radiotherapy & Chemotherapy. Cancernet.co.uk has over 500 pages describing cancer, its management, practical tips and tool which patients, their carers and their doctors have found helpful during the cancer journey.