Fruit, veggies linked to heart health
November 2, 2004
A multiyear study involving more than 100,000 participants provides added
support that eating lots of fruit and vegetables is good for the heart. But
the analysis failed to show similar benefits for cancer, a result that
prompted the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, which published the
study Tuesday, to raise questions about its findings. The report supports
the American Heart Association's recommendations to consume at least five
servings of fruit and vegetables per day, according to the researchers, led
by Dr. Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health. But for
cancer, the report said, "The protective effect of fruit and vegetable
intake may have been overstated." The research team studied 71,910
females in the Nurse's Health study and 37,725 males in the Health
Professionals Follow-up Study. The research began in the mid-1980s and the
report followed the participants until 1998. They found participants who ate
five or more servings of fruit and vegetables daily had a slightly decreased
risk of heart disease, but there was no statistically significant difference
in cancer rates. The researchers provided several possible explanations for
that result, while the journal published an editorial suggesting potential
sources of error. It may be that cancer risk is increased only in people who
eat few fruits and vegetables, the researchers said.
Since most of the study participants -- nurses and other health
professionals -- tended to include fruit and vegetables in their diets, no
protective association would have been noticeable. Another possibility, the
authors said, is that it takes longer for cancer to develop than heart
disease, so it may take longer for a protective association from higher
fruit and vegetable consumption to show up.
In addition, they said, the
overall finding does not preclude protective effects of some specific
vegetables. For example, they found that eating cruciferous vegetables --
such as broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage and watercress -- was associated with
lower rates of
cancer in males who smoked and didn't use multivitamins. They
also had found a lower rate of bladder cancer in men who ate more
cruciferous vegetables. Fruits were more strongly associated with reduced
heart disease than vegetables, the researchers said. Among vegetables, those
most closely related to better heart health were green leafy vegetables.
In an editorial in the same issue of the journal,
Dr. Arthur Schatzkin and Victor Kipnis of the National Cancer Institute in
Bethesda, Maryland, contend it "remains an open question" whether eating
fruits and vegetables provides cancer protection. Errors in collecting the
data could obscure a cancer reduction associated with eating fruit and
vegetables, Schatzkin said. Even a modest degree of protection could
translate into many lives, "since everybody eats," he said. "Our whole point
was, look, we know we're dealing with a certain amount of error in measuring what people eat, and that error is enough to make a modest association
disappear," Schatzkin said in a telephone interview. The questionnaire
method used to collect data on eating habits is subject to error, Schatzkin
and Kipnis wrote. They also questioned statistical methods used, noting that
the researchers adjusted for several other factors such as total energy
intake, smoking, alcohol use and taking vitamins, which also may be subject
to error. "In other words, the evidence is simply inadequate at this time to
determine whether fruit and vegetable intake confers modest protection
against cancer," Schatzkin and Kipnis concluded. The research was
funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes
of Health and the Florida Department of Citrus.