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 Appeared in CNN.
LONDON, England (AP) -- New research has revived the notion that a
high-fiber diet may protect against colon cancer.
Long-standing recommendations for high-fiber diets have taken a hit over
the last few years after a handful of carefully conducted studies failed
to find a benefit.
But experts say two major studies published this week in The Lancet
medical journal -- one on Americans and the other on Europeans -- indicate
previous research may not have examined a broad enough range of fiber
consumption or a wide enough variety of fiber sources to show an effect.
"These two new findings show that the fiber hypothesis is still alive,"
said the leader of the American study, Ulrike Peters of the U.S. National
Cancer Institute.
Figuring out the relationship between nutrition and disease has always
proved difficult, but experts say fiber is particularly complicated
because there are various types and they all could act differently.
Fiber is found in fruits, vegetables and whole grains. Americans eat about
16 grams a day, while Europeans eat about 22 grams. The new studies
indicate fiber intake needs to be about 30 grams a day to protect against
colon cancer.
There are 2 grams of fiber in a slice of whole meal bread. A banana has 3
grams and an apple has 3.5 grams, the same as a cup of brown rice. Some
super-high fiber breakfast cereals have as much as 14 grams per half cup.
In the American study, investigators compared the daily fiber intake of
3,600 people who had precancerous growths in the colon with that of around
34,000 people who did not.
They were divided into five groups, according to how much fiber they ate.
The average roughage intake in the lowest group was 12 grams a day, while
in the highest group it was 36 grams a day.
People who ate the most fiber had a 27 percent lower risk of precancerous
growths than those who ate the least.
In the European study, the largest one ever conducted on nutrition and
cancer, scientists examined the link in more than 500,000 people in 10
countries.
As in the American study, questionnaires separated the people into five
groups, according to fiber intake.
Following them for an average of four years, 1,065 of them had developed
colorectal cancer.
Those who ate the most fiber, about 35 grams a day, had about a 40 percent
lower risk of colorectal cancer compared with those who ate the least,
about 15 grams a day, the study found.
"In the top quintile (group) they were eating 15 grams of cereal fiber,
which is equivalent to five or six slices of whole meal bread, plus they
were eating seven portions of fruit and vegetables a day, which is
basically the Mediterranean levels," said the study's leader, Sheila
Bingham, head of the diet and cancer group at Cambridge University's human
nutrition unit.
Long debated
Discussions about the link between fiber and bowel health -- or, at least
the relative merits of white and brown bread -- date back to antiquity.
In a twist on modern thought, Hippocrates, who lived in the 5th century
B.C., believed white bread was more nutritious because it creates less
feces than brown bread. Scientists now believe the extra feces is a
benefit.
The contemporary theory that fiber wards off colon cancer began in the
1970s, when a British doctor, Denis Burkitt, noted that poor people in
Africa produce more feces than Westerners and get much less colon cancer.
One obvious difference between the two groups was that Africans consumed
more fiber.
Scientists believe that fiber dilutes and absorbs cancer-causing agents
and makes them flow more quickly through the body. Researchers have also
theorized that a high-fiber diet makes protective changes to cells or
curtails bile acids that irritate the intestinal lining and promote
growths.
The first big dent in the theory came in 1999 from a study that tracked
the eating habits of 88,757 American nurses for 16 years. The risk of
colon cancer was the same, regardless of how much fiber the women were
eating.
Then in 2000, two studies which used a different method also came up
negative. They put people on different diets and counted precancerous
growths in their colons for up to four years. There was no apparent effect
from high-fiber diets or supplements.
One major difference between the former and current studies is that the
new ones examine more diverse populations who eat different types of fiber
and in hugely varying amounts.
However, Andy Ness, a lecturer in epidemiology at Bristol University in
England, who was not connected with either study, said the latest research
is not the last word.
"Across Europe, there is an amazing variation in risks of cancer. There is
also a huge variation in diet, so across these cultures you can get this
breadth of intake. However, what you might be picking up across this range
of diet is a range of cultures. It's possible it's something else that
goes with that pattern of diet," he said.

May 2, 2003.
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