Reported February 07, 2010
A new study indicates that the non-smokers and consumers
of soy have a lower risk of lung cancer. Researchers stated in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition that soy has isoflavones, identically
functional as hormone estrogen with anti-cancer qualities that respond to
cancers of the breast and prostate. Also the lung-cells have properties that
react to isoflavones.
Almost 36,000 Japanese men and more than 40,000 Japanese women aged 45 to 74
years old and free of cancer were studied by Dr. Taichi Shimazu and his
colleagues of the National Cancer Center in Tokyo.
In this study, food intake, smoking status, medical history, and other
lifestyle factors of the people involved were noted. During the 11 years of
the study (1995 and 1999), overall rates oflung cancer were less. About one
in 75 men and one in 225 females were diagnosed with cancer. Among 13,000
non-smoker men who ate least soy, there were 22lung cancer cases and only 13
lung cancer cases were found in those who ate the most.
Authors of this study say that the current study did not
collect data on isoflavone supplement or second-hand smokers. So, these
findings should be confirmed among Japanese and other populations. No
eating-behavior change has yet been suggested by this study.
Source : TopNews