Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-cjp7w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-19T05:24:15.190Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nutrition and cancer: evidence gaps and opportunities for improving knowledge

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 March 2020

James L. Thorne*
Affiliation:
School of Food Science and Nutrition, Faculty of Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK The Leeds Breast Cancer Research Group, Faculty of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, UK
J. Bernadette Moore
Affiliation:
School of Food Science and Nutrition, Faculty of Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
Bernard M. Corfe
Affiliation:
NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, UK Molecular Gastroenterology Research Group, Department of Oncology & Metabolism, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
*
*Corresponding author: James L Thorne, email j.l.thorne@leeds.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The Nutrition Society's 1st Annual Nutrition and Cancer Networking Conference brought together scientists from the fields of Nutrition, Epidemiology, Public Health, Medical Oncology and Surgery with representatives of the public, cancer survivors and cancer charities. Speakers representing these different groups presented the challenges to collaboration, how the needs of patients and the public can be met, and the most promising routes for future research. The conference programme promoted debate on these issues to highlight current gaps in understanding and barriers to generating and implementing evidence-based nutrition advice. The main conclusions were that the fundamental biology of how nutrition influences the complex cancer risk profiles of diverse populations needs to be better understood. Individual and population level genetics interact with the environment over a lifespan to dictate cancer risk. Large charities and government have a role to play in diminishing our current potently obesogenic environment and exploiting nutrition to reduce cancer deaths. Understanding how best to communicate, advise and support individuals wishing to make dietary and lifestyle changes, can reduce cancer risk, enhance recovery and improve the lives of those living with and beyond cancer.

Type
1st Annual Nutrition and Cancer Networking Meeting
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2020

The link between nutrition and cancer is now unequivocal. About 10–15 % of all cancers are considered preventable by nutritional parameters, and correct nutrition can improve both recovery from treatment and survival(Reference Brown, Rumgay and Dunlop1,2) . The World Cancer Research Fund and American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR)(2), the American Cancer Society(Reference Kushi, Doyle and McCullough3) and the WHO(4) have provided evidence-based nutrition and physical activity public health guidelines to reduce cancer risk. Overwhelming consensus exists for advising people to: maintain a healthy weight (typically considered BMI 18⋅5–24⋅9 with WCRF suggesting to be at the lower end of this range); engage in regular physical activity; consume a diet rich in vegetables, fruit, whole grains and plant-based protein sources such as legumes, nuts and seeds; limit consumption of highly processed or ‘fast foods’ that are high in saturated fat, sugar, salt and refined carbohydrates and limit consumption of red and processed meats, sugar-sweetened beverages and alcohol. Adherence to these guidelines has repeatedly been shown to reduce risk of cancer incidence in multiple populations at multiple sites including colorectal(Reference Petimar, Smith-Warner and Rosner5Reference Nomura, Dash and Rosenberg8), head and neck(Reference Bravi, Polesel and Garavello9), pancreas(Reference Lucas, Bravi and Boffetta10) and breast(Reference Hastert, Beresford and Patterson11Reference Nomura, Dash and Rosenberg13).

Sex and ethnicity modify cancer risk, as do multiple genetic variants that mediate risk for body fatness and/or cancer. The molecular explanations for site-, sex- and ethnicity-specific risk profiles remain as gaps in current understanding and represent a significant barrier to enacting stratified (if not yet personalised) prevention strategies. Other critical unanswered questions include: how best to communicate existing advice that is based on robust and convincing evidence to the public; should advice differ following diagnosis or following treatment and what are the most pressing nutrition research areas to reduce cancer rates and improve survival and quality of life? The aim of the 1st Annual Nutrition and Cancer Networking Conference, held in Sheffield in July 2019, was to bring together nutritional scientists, clinicians, funding agencies, patients and their representatives to discuss these outstanding issues.

Nutrition across the course of cancer treatment

Malnutrition is a frequent complication of cancer therapy and impairs patient survival and recovery. Speaker Dr Alessandro Laviano (University of Sapienza) contributed to The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism guidelines for cancer patients, which are aimed at identifying early warning signs of malnutrition and provide methods for multi-disciplinary teams to prevent the deterioration of metabolic health of cancer patients(Reference Arends, Bachmann and Baracos14). Patients at risk of cachexia and sarcopenia, or who may have their therapy dose capped due to the excessive BMI may benefit most from prehabilitation. Studies of dose capping in obese individuals suggest better outcomes when doses are not capped despite toxicity concerns(Reference Chambers, Daniels and Thompson15). As described by Ms Mary Pegington (University of Manchester) at the meeting, assessing lean body mass may be more informative for deciding chemotherapy dose than BMI. A meta-analysis of twenty-two studies found prehabilitation typically mitigates the damage caused by major surgery, radio- and chemo-therapy, resulting in a more rapid return to pre-surgical capabilities quicker(Reference Faithfull, Turner and Poole16). Delegates discussed that there may be cases where prehabilitation should be balanced with the concern that delaying treatment may increase relapse rates in some cancer types. Of note is a recent report highlighted by Dr Wootton conducted by Macmillan, the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Nutrition and Cancer Collaboration and the Royal College of Anaesthetists. This report summarised the benefits of prehabilitation and provided guidance for its use in the management and care of people with cancer(17). Patient wellbeing should also be considered, as empowerment for some patients may be perceived as shouldering the burden for others(Reference Giles and Cummins18).

In general, cancer site specific nutrition advice for survivors is lacking. Although breast cancer survivors do have tailored advice and guidelines (e.g. the WCRF document Survivors of breast and other cancers), advice for survivors of all other cancers is underdeveloped, in part due to a weak or absent evidence-base of protective benefit. Maintaining a healthy weight seems to be effective for the prevention of breast, colorectal and bladder cancer recurrence, but the evidence that this advice would be effective in the prevention of other cancers is lacking (see later). Furthermore, there are multiple changes associated with obesity that may be linked to cancer recurrence and it is still unclear exactly what the physiological mechanisms are that drive relapse. Obesity is also associated with other co-morbidities such as dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance (metabolic syndrome) that may also play a role in the development of some cancers. How poor nutrition and body composition both of which independently raise primary risk are linked to the development of metastatic disease is also unknown at this time, indeed if there is any role at all. These gaps were considered at the meeting as critical to address if cancer recurrence rates or disease-free survival times are to be ameliorated.

Translating nutrition knowledge into behaviour change

Communicating complex risk profiles to the general population who have idiosyncratic risk profiles for many cancers is problematic in itself. Communication barriers are further compounded and contradicted by the obesogenic environment individuals who attempt to act on advice are faced with(Reference Moore and Boesch19). Scientific understanding of behaviour change and communication methods is still evolving(Reference Patel, Beeken and Leurent20Reference Pegington, Adams and Bundred22) and there are likely to be improvements in how advice is presented as these fields develop(Reference McCartney23). An important consideration raised during the course of the meeting was how should researchers communicate the robust and evidenced-based advice for cancer prevention with the people who need it and translate research findings into bona fide behaviour change? Dr Rebecca Beeken (University of Leeds) explained that there are a variety of reasons why people generally struggle to adhere to guidelines. Often decisions about meals and physical activity are taken by family units together rather than individuals indicating that the entire family needs to change their habits to allow successful adherence to the advice being provided. Supportive structured advice such as the ‘10 top tips’ to facilitate individuals in their attempts to reduce their cancer risk through changes in diet and physical activity(Reference Patel, Beeken and Leurent20,Reference Beeken, Croker and Morris24) have been used to overcome such barriers. Self-monitoring (e.g. physical activity trackers, dietary recording tools) combined with individually tailored goal planning techniques are twice as likely to succeed as other interventions(Reference Michie, Abraham and Whittington25).

Encouragingly, there are now a variety of reports indicating that there are distinct teachable moments open to clinical staff where patients are highly receptive to advice. However, if these moments are not seized upon, the information vacuum is worryingly filled by the wealth of information available via the internet. This advice is frequently unsubstantiated, lacks peer-review and may be posted or published for private financial incentives. Therefore, providing simple, coherent, easy to adopt and robust advice at key teachable moments is paramount to aid in an appropriate behaviour change.

Individual nutrients

The role of individual nutrients in cancer prevention or therapy has been more challenging to validate and implement in the clinic than modifying dietary patterns but is gaining traction. Researchers involved in the UK Therapeutic Cancer Prevention Network, and the NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration are coordinating clinical trials to understand how compounds such as resveratrol(Reference Cai, Scott and Kholghi26), n-3 fatty acids(Reference Eltweri, Thomas and Fisk27) and plant sterols(Reference Thorne, Cioccoloni and Hughes28,Reference Hutchinson, Lianto and Moore29) , may improve therapy, support metabolic health, slow cancer initiation or growth and improve relapse free survival. Aspirin and n-3 fatty acids (at nutraceutical doses of 2–4 g/d) have shown promising results in reducing an adenoma size in a colorectal cancer prevention trial(Reference Hull, Sprange and Hepburn30). Ms Samantha Hutchinson (University of Leeds) explained that plant sterols that are already indicated for the management of CVD as an alternative or adjunct to statins, are now emerging as potential anti-cancer agents(Reference Jiang, Zhao and Xu31,Reference Fakih, Sanver and Kane32) , potentially through suppression of intra-tumour cholesterol metabolism(Reference Hutchinson, Lianto and Moore29). Conversely, although the molecular evidence that Vitamin D should act in a cancer chemoprevention manner(Reference Thorne and Campbell33), clinical and epidemiological studies remain inconclusive(Reference Thorne and Campbell33Reference Fedirko, Mandle and Zhu38). In all these trials, lessons are being learnt. For example, attempting to deliver the maximum tolerated dose of a nutritive compound, as typical in pharmacological trials, does not always appear to be beneficial(Reference Cai, Scott and Kholghi26). Hypotheses that link nutrients with cancer prevention typically arise from chronic long-term low-dose exposure in free-living individuals. Such epidemiological attempts to identify causal links between individual nutrients and cancer can be hampered by recall bias, unavoidable confounders and the observational nature inherent in nutrition research, especially over the time scales required to observe differences in cancer incidences. This has led to some expensive mistakes.

An example of such a mistake was explored by Dr Sarah Lewis (University of Bristol) who described how low selenium levels had been reported to be associated with increased prostate cancer risk(Reference Hurst, Hooper and Norat39), but the $114 m SELECT trial into selenium supplementation was halted early as selenium actually led to increased risk of prostate cancer and type 2 diabetes(Reference Klein, Thompson and Tangen40). Mendelian randomisation (MR) studies that exploit the plethora of genome wide association studies now available have the ability to link nutrition, metabolic and genetic profiles of individuals with cancer risk, examining life-time exposure to nutrient profiles dictated by genetic variants. As reported by Dr Sarah Lewis, MR studies remove many of the biases and confounding effects of observational cohort studies that are hampered by inaccuracies in recall of participants. Indeed, after the SELECT trial was abandoned, an MR study conducted by Dr Lewis and colleagues corroborated the adverse influence of selenium on prostate cancer and type 2 diabetes(Reference Yarmolinsky, Bonilla and Haycock41). Designing clinical trials with individual nutrients should be preceded with comprehensive MR where instruments covering sufficient trait variance as are available. A further development for the MR field, as survival data becomes more complete, will be to consider how individual nutrients and genetic predictors of their circulating concentrations associate with hard clinical endpoints such as progression free survival.

Patient's perspectives

Individuals living with and beyond cancer are perhaps the most neglected group in terms of validated robust nutritional advice. Financial and other constraints often mean nutrition advice is rarely provided at the point of care(42) despite several agencies including The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism(Reference Arends, Bachmann and Baracos14), American Cancer Society(Reference Rock, Doyle and Demark-Wahnefried43) and WCRF(44) having published guidelines for cancer patients and survivors. Whereas the evidence behind advice to the general public about nutrition and cancer risk is robust but the uptake is poor; at the peri-diagnosis period the evidence underpinning advice is weaker but uptake is greater. A critical point made by Dr Steve Wootton (University of Southampton) is that while eight in ten cancer patients receive some kind of nutrition advice(45), only eight in ten of the clinicians providing this advice are aware of the clinical nutrition guidelines for cancer patients(46). Advice therefore falls short of the best possible, and typically relapses to the standard advice of a balanced diet and regular physical activity(45). As researchers and clinicians are reluctant to provide advice without a stringently robust evidence base, an information vacuum has been opportunistically filled by low-quality information derived from unregulated internet sites. This presents a serious challenge as highlighted by the patient and public representatives at the meeting with Jacqui Gath (Independent Cancer Patients' Voice) commenting ‘patients can't wait ten years to find out the results of your trial’. A paucity of nutritional training throughout the medical education system exacerbates the problem as clinicians are not supported in giving the best advice possible for their patients(Reference Barnard47). Attendees fully agreed with Dr Alessandro Laviano who raised the point that integration of nutrition in clinical training is highly likely to provide long term benefit to patients with cancer and a wide range of other diseases.

Notably, attempts to understand whether interventions can improve the mental wellbeing of patients have also been equivocal. As highlighted by Ms Mary Pegington during the meeting, although there is evidence to suggest that vitality scores are increased by weight management interventions in cancer patients shortly after treatment, worryingly, there is a slightly increased susceptibility to depression in the longer term, which is perhaps consistent with a failure to maintain the weight loss. Maintaining weight loss is not a problem restricted to cancer patients. If temporary weight loss peri-therapeutically was found to improve longer term outcomes, then a more effective approach may be to exploit the teachable moment to encourage patients to undergo more dramatic changes to diet and lifestyle but adherence would be improved as the temporary nature of the intervention seems more achievable.

Societal and political barriers

Perhaps the greatest barrier to improving nutrition linked cancer rates and survival is widespread health inequalities. In England, between 2015 and 2017 the gap in healthy life expectancy between the least and most deprived areas was 19⋅1 years for males and 18⋅8 years for females; the gap in life expectancy was 9⋅4 and 7⋅4 years respectively(48). A recent Lancet report established that contemporary increases in unemployment and austerity measures have been associated with increases in cancer mortality rates(Reference Maruthappu, Watkins and Noor49). Austerity measures are both regressive, disproportionally impacting low socio-economic groups who already suffer the highest cancer and obesity rates, and are bad for health(Reference Stuckler, Reeves and Loopstra50). Reassuringly, Public Health England now indicate that a healthy diet and a healthy weight are one of their top most priorities for the 2020–2025 period(51); a critical question is how might this to be achieved? A combination of legislative, financial and public advisory methods may provide an effective solution. For example, economic modelling suggests that price increases(Reference Scheelbeek, Cornelsen and Marteau52,Reference Moore and Fielding53) and reformulation(Reference Moore, Horti and Fielding54) of energy dense foods could rapidly drive obesity rates down resulting in a lagged reduction in cancer rates. Driving down obesity rates will not just improve cancer incidence, and recurrence and mortality rates, but also reduce incidence of other non-communicable diseases such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, CVD and type 2 diabetes.

Controversial campaigns by major charitable organisations aimed at increasing the awareness of the link between obesity and cancer have been perceived as stigmatising(55), with weight stigma negatively affecting well-being(Reference Jackson, Beeken and Wardle56), health correlates and behaviours(Reference Puhl and Suh57). Dr Malcolm Clark (Cancer Research UK) presented the Cancer Research UK ‘Ob_s__y’ campaign along with the concept and justification. Excess body fatness is the leading cause of diet-preventable cancers, with estimates suggesting it accounts for 6⋅3 % of all cancers in the UK(Reference Brown, Rumgay and Dunlop1). At the molecular level, obesity activates an array of signalling pathways involved in cancer pathogenesis. Altered adipokine, cytokine and hormone production drive inflammation and proliferation; whilst disruption of insulin and cholesterol signalling leads to the deregulation of cellular energy homeostasis and metabolism(Reference Khandekar, Cohen and Spiegelman58). Epidemiological evidence indicates that BMI is associated with many cancers across a J-shaped curve, where low (<20) and high (>25) BMI are associated with a general elevated risk, with risk continuing to increase as adiposity does(Reference Bhaskaran, Douglas and Forbes59). Excess body weight increases the risk of recurrence and reduced survival from breast(Reference Azrad and Demark-Wahnefried60) and other cancers such as colorectal(Reference Gibson, Park and Robien61) and bladder(Reference Lin, Wang and Wu62). However, this is not true for all cancers; risk of lung, pre-menopausal breast, prostate and oral cavities cancers actually reduces with increasing BMI(Reference Bhaskaran, Douglas and Forbes59,Reference Schoemaker and Nichols63) . For some cancers, such as pre-menopausal breast cancer, overweight in early adulthood appears to protect against cancer in later years(Reference Bhaskaran, Douglas and Forbes59). Adherence to advice by the general public remains incomplete, at least in part due to a lack of acceptable and potentially inefficacious delivery methods(Reference McCartney23). Yet, we know that obesity causes cancer so the time to act is already upon us(Reference Wiseman64). Society, government and charities must act coherently and cooperate to provide a single clear message and provide tangible support to aid those wishing to maintain and regain a healthy BMI.

Future directions

Advances in research methods such as applying MR to dietary exposures, and highly accurate yet inexpensive dietary recording methods, should provide far more robust hypothesis testing in clinical trials than has been possible before, especially where individual nutrients are concerned. Understanding how best to communicate, advise and support individuals wishing to make changes, combined with advances in legislative changes to ameliorate the potently obesogenic environment we all face, will generate the greatest levels of success in exploiting nutrition to reduce cancer deaths. Organisations such as the Nutrition Society, NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration and The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism, recognise the importance of robust research into how nutrition can reduce cancer risk, enhance recovery and improve the lives of those living with and beyond cancer. The open nature of these organisations, and their attempts to link key stakeholders will be crucial in shaping nutrition and cancer research partnerships in the coming years.

Future meetings should develop a better understanding of the barriers still in place. Aims of future meetings should be to describe and understand the fundamental biology linking nutrition with cancer, how individual and population level genetics alter these links, the role of the environment in the context of biological mechanisms and in commercial and government decision making, public advice, taxation and incentivisation. To achieve this in the coming years, all stake holders including patients and public representatives, the food industry, cancer prevention charities, government policy makers, scientists and clinicians need representation. An established interaction between these stake holders under the guidance of learned societies and structured collaborations and networks will occur as subsequent meetings are held. The authors welcome any interested members of the scientific community, the public, patients, government or industry representatives to contact us directly, or via our roles in the Nutrition Society and NIHR Nutrition and Cancer Collaboration.

Acknowledgements

The organising committee of the 1st Nutrition and Cancer networking would like to thank the speakers who presented at the meeting: Dr Sarah Lewis (University of Bristol), Dr Rebecca Beeken (University of Leeds), Ms. Mary Pegington (University of Manchester), Ms. Samantha Hutchinson (University of Leeds), Ms. Jacqui Gath (Patient and Public representative), Dr Malcolm Clark (Cancer Research UK), Dr Steve Wootton (University of Southampton and the NIHR Nutrition and Cancer Collaboration), Mr. Georgios Saltaouras (Oxford Brookes University) and Dr Alessandro Laviano (Sapienza University of Rome).

Financial Support

The organising committee would like to acknowledge that this meeting was supported by a small meeting grant provided by the Nutrition Society.

Conflict of Interest

None

References

Brown, KF, Rumgay, H, Dunlop, C et al. (2018) The fraction of cancer attributable to modifiable risk factors in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and the United Kingdom in 2015. Br J Cancer 118, 11301141.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WCRF/AICR (2017) WCRF/AICR Continuous Update Project Report: Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity and Cancer. Third Expert Report. https://www.wcrf.org/sites/default/files/Summary-of-Third-Expert-Report-2018.pdf (accessed December 2019).Google Scholar
Kushi, LH, Doyle, C, McCullough, M et al. (2012) American Cancer Society Guidelines on nutrition and physical activity for cancer prevention: reducing the risk of cancer with healthy food choices and physical activity. CA Cancer J Clin 62, 3067.Google ScholarPubMed
World Health Organization (2003) Diet, nutrition and the prevention of chronic diseases. World Health Organ. Tech. Rep. Ser. 916, i–viii, Q4226 1149.Google Scholar
Petimar, J, Smith-Warner, SA, Rosner, B et al. (2019) Adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research 2018 recommendations for cancer prevention and risk of colorectal cancer. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev. 28, 14691479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turati, F, Bravi, F, Di Maso, M et al. (2017) Adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research recommendations and colorectal cancer risk. Eur J Cancer 85, 8694.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hastert, TA & White, E (2016) Association between meeting the WCRF/AICR cancer prevention recommendations and colorectal cancer incidence: results from the VITAL cohort. Cancer Causes Control 27, 13471359.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nomura, SJ, Dash, C, Rosenberg, L et al. (2016) Is adherence to diet, physical activity, and body weight cancer prevention recommendations associated with colorectal cancer incidence in African American women? Cancer Causes Control 27, 869879.Google ScholarPubMed
Bravi, F, Polesel, J, Garavello, W et al. (2017) Adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research recommendations and head and neck cancers risk. Oral Oncol. 64, 5964.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lucas, AL, Bravi, F, Boffetta, P et al. (2016) Adherence to World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research recommendations and pancreatic cancer risk. Cancer Epidemiol. 40, 1521.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hastert, TA, Beresford, SA, Patterson, RE et al. (2013) Adherence to WCRF/AICR cancer prevention recommendations and risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev. 22, 14981508.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nomura, SJ, Inoue-Choi, M, Lazovich, D et al. (2016) WCRF/AICR recommendation adherence and breast cancer incidence among postmenopausal women with and without non-modifiable risk factors. Int J Cancer 138, 26022615.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nomura, SJ, Dash, C, Rosenberg, L et al. (2016) Adherence to diet, physical activity and body weight recommendations and breast cancer incidence in the Black Women's Health Study. Int J Cancer 139, 27382752.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arends, J, Bachmann, P, Baracos, V et al. (2017) ESPEN Guidelines on nutrition in cancer patients. Clin Nutr 36, 1148.Google ScholarPubMed
Chambers, P, Daniels, SH, Thompson, LC et al. (2012) Chemotherapy dose reductions in obese patients with colorectal cancer. Ann Oncol 23, 748753.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Faithfull, S, Turner, L, Poole, K et al. (2019) Prehabilitation for adults diagnosed with cancer: a systematic review of long-term physical function, nutrition and patient-reported outcomes. Eur J Cancer Care 28, e13023.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
National Institute for Health Research Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration, Royal College of Anaesthetists, Macmillan Cancer Support (2019) Principles and guidance for prehabilitation within the management and support of people with cancer. Available at https://www.macmillan.org.uk/assets/prehabilitation-guidance-for-people-with-cancer.pdfGoogle Scholar
Giles, C & Cummins, S (2019) Prehabilitation before cancer treatment. Br Med J 366, l5120.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moore, JB & Boesch, C (2019) Getting energy balance right in an obesogenic world. P Nutr Soc 78, 259261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patel, N, Beeken, RJ, Leurent, B et al. (2018) Cost-effectiveness of habit-based advice for weight control versus usual care in general practice in the Ten Top Tips (10TT) trial: economic evaluation based on a randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open 8, e017511.Google ScholarPubMed
Harvie, M, Pegington, M, McMullan, D et al. (2019) The effectiveness of home versus community-based weight control programmes initiated soon after breast cancer diagnosis: a randomised controlled trial. Br J Cancer 121, 443454.Google ScholarPubMed
Pegington, M, Adams, JE, Bundred, NJ et al. (2018) Recruitment to the “Breast-Activity and Healthy Eating After Diagnosis” (B-AHEAD) randomized controlled trial. Integr Cancer Ther 17, 131137.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McCartney, M (2018) Margaret McCartney: cancer patients should not be shamed. Br Med J 360, k1139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beeken, RJ, Croker, H, Morris, S et al. (2012) Study protocol for the 10 Top Tips (10TT) trial: randomised controlled trial of habit-based advice for weight control in general practice. BMC public health 12, 667.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Michie, S, Abraham, C, Whittington, C et al. (2009) Effective techniques in healthy eating and physical activity interventions: a meta-regression. Health Psychol 28, 690701.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cai, H, Scott, E, Kholghi, A et al. (2015) Cancer chemoprevention: evidence of a nonlinear dose response for the protective effects of resveratrol in humans and mice. Sci Transl Med 7, 298ra117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eltweri, AM, Thomas, AL, Fisk, HL et al. (2017) Plasma and erythrocyte uptake of omega-3 fatty acids from an intravenous fish oil based lipid emulsion in patients with advanced oesophagogastric cancer. Clin Nutr 36, 768774.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thorne, J, Cioccoloni, G, Hughes, T et al. (2019) Plant Sterol INtervention for Cancer Prevention (PINC). https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/study/NCT04147767.Google Scholar
Hutchinson, SA, Lianto, P, Moore, JB et al. (2019) Phytosterols inhibit side-chain oxysterol mediated activation of LXR in breast cancer cells. Int J Mol Sci 20, 32413257.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hull, MA, Sprange, K, Hepburn, T et al. (2018) Eicosapentaenoic acid and aspirin, alone and in combination, for the prevention of colorectal adenomas (seAFOod Polyp Prevention trial): a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 2 × 2 factorial trial. Lancet 392, 25832594.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jiang, L, Zhao, X, Xu, J et al. (2019) The protective effect of dietary phytosterols on cancer risk: a systematic meta-analysis. J Oncol 2019, 11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fakih, O, Sanver, D, Kane, D et al. (2018) Exploring the biophysical properties of phytosterols in the plasma membrane for novel cancer prevention strategies. Biochimie 153, 150161.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thorne, J & Campbell, MJ (2008) The vitamin D receptor in cancer. Proc. Nutr. Soc. 67, 115127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Campbell, MJ & Trump, DL (2017) Vitamin D receptor signaling and cancer. Endocrinol. Metab. Clin. North Am. 46, 10091038.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Savoie, MB, Paciorek, A, Zhang, L et al. (2019) Vitamin D levels in patients with colorectal cancer and matched household members. J Clin Nutr Food Sci 2, 69.Google ScholarPubMed
Huss, L, Butt, ST, Borgquist, S et al. (2019) Vitamin D receptor expression in invasive breast tumors and breast cancer survival. Breast Cancer Res. 21, 84.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhu, M, Tan, Z, Luo, Z et al. (2019) Association of the vitamin D metabolism gene GC and CYP27B1 polymorphisms with cancer susceptibility: a meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis. Biosci Rep 39, 368381.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fedirko, V, Mandle, HB, Zhu, W et al. (2019) Vitamin D-related genes, blood vitamin D levels and colorectal cancer risk in Western European populations. Nutrients 11, 1954.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hurst, R, Hooper, L, Norat, T et al. (2012) Selenium and prostate cancer: systematic review and meta-analysis. Am J Clin Nutr 96, 111122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Klein, EA, Thompson, IM, Tangen, CM et al. (2011) Vitamin E and the risk of prostate cancer the selenium and vitamin E cancer prevention trial (SELECT). Jama-J Am Med Assoc 306, 15491556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yarmolinsky, J, Bonilla, C, Haycock, PC et al. (2018) Circulating selenium and prostate cancer risk: a mendelian randomization analysis. J Natl Cancer Inst 110, 10351038.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
NIHR (2015) Report of Phase One July 2015. Cancer and Nutrition NIHR Infrastructure Collaboration. National Institute for Health Research.Google Scholar
Rock, CL, Doyle, C, Demark-Wahnefried, W et al. (2012) Nutrition and physical activity guidelines for cancer survivors. Ca-Cancer J Clin 62, 243274.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WCRF/AICR (2018) WCRF/AICR continuous update project on survivors of breast and other cancers. https://www.wcrf.org/sites/default/files/Cancer-Survivors.pdf (accessed December 2019).Google Scholar
NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration (2015) Cancer and Nutrition NIHR infrastructure collaboration Summary Report of Phase One July 2015. http://cancerandnutrition.nihr.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Cancer-Nutrition-Summary-Report-FINAL_5_Nov-2015.pdf.Google Scholar
NIHR Cancer and Nutrition Collaboration (2017) Cancer and Nutrition NIHR infrastructure collaboration Summary Report of Phase Two March 2017. https://cancerandnutrition.nihr.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Cancer-and-Nutrition-Phase-II-report.pdf.Google Scholar
Barnard, ND (2019) Ignorance of nutrition is no longer defensible. JAMA Intern Med 179, 10211022.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Office for National Statistics (2019) Health state life expectancies by national deprivation deciles, England and Wales: 2015 to 2017. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/healthinequalities/bulletins/healthstatelifeexpectanciesbyindexofmultipledeprivationimd/2015to2017.Google Scholar
Maruthappu, M, Watkins, J, Noor, AM et al. (2016) Economic downturns, universal health coverage, and cancer mortality in high-income and middle-income countries, 1990–2010: a longitudinal analysis. Lancet 388, 684695.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stuckler, D, Reeves, A, Loopstra, R et al. (2017) Austerity and health: the impact in the UK and Europe. Eur J Public Health 27, 1821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Public Health England (2019) PHE Strategy 2020–25, p. 40. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk.Google Scholar
Scheelbeek, PFD, Cornelsen, L, Marteau, TM et al. (2019) Potential impact on prevalence of obesity in the UK of a 20 % price increase in high sugar snacks: modelling study. Br Med J 366, l4786.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moore, JB & Fielding, BA (2019) Taxing confectionery, biscuits, and cakes to control obesity. Br Med J 366, l5298.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moore, JB, Horti, A & Fielding, BA (2018) Evaluation of the nutrient content of yogurts: a comprehensive survey of yogurt products in the major UK supermarkets. BMJ Open 8, e021387.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
The Lancet Gastroenterology H (2019) The great obesity debate: divided we fall. Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol 4, 655.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, SE, Beeken, RJ & Wardle, J (2015) Obesity, perceived weight discrimination, and psychological well-being in older adults in England. Obesity (Silver Spring) 23, 11051111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Puhl, R & Suh, Y (2015) Health consequences of weight stigma: implications for obesity prevention and treatment. Curr Obes Rep 4, 182190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Khandekar, MJ, Cohen, P & Spiegelman, BM (2011) Molecular mechanisms of cancer development in obesity. Nat Rev Cancer 11, 886895.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bhaskaran, K, Douglas, I, Forbes, H et al. (2014) Body-mass index and risk of 22 specific cancers: a population-based cohort study of 5⋅24 million UK adults. Lancet 384, 755765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azrad, M & Demark-Wahnefried, W (2014) The association between adiposity and breast cancer recurrence and survival: a review of the recent literature. Curr Nutr Rep 3, 915.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gibson, TM, Park, Y, Robien, K et al. (2014) Body mass index and risk of second obesity-associated cancers after colorectal cancer: a pooled analysis of prospective cohort studies. J. Clin. Oncol. 32, 40044011.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lin, YD, Wang, YY, Wu, Q et al. (2018) Association between obesity and bladder cancer recurrence: a meta-analysis. Clin Chim Acta 480, 4146.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Premenopausal Breast Cancer Collaborative G, Schoemaker, MJ, Nichols, HB et al. (2018) Association of body mass index and age with subsequent breast cancer risk in premenopausal women. JAMA Oncol. 4, e181771.Google ScholarPubMed
Wiseman, MJ (2019) Nutrition and cancer: prevention and survival. Br J Nutr 122, 481487.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed