Reducing Breast Cancer Recurrence: The Role of Dietary Polyphenolics.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the clinical effects of polyphenols, including those in chocolate, on reducing breast cancer recurrence.
Results Summary
The study suggests that flavonol polyphenols found in chocolate, among other foods, may help reduce breast cancer recurrence risk. A diet naturally high in flavonol polyphenols, including chocolate, is recommended for breast cancer patients.
Population
Breast cancer patients
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
polyphenolic phytochemicals such as phenolic acids in olive oil, flavonols in tea, chocolate and grapes, and isoflavones in soy products | decrease | breast cancer | - | - | reduce the risk | #1 |
A dietary food pattern naturally rich in polyphenols is the Mediterranean diet | decrease | breast cancer incidence | those of Mediterranean descent | - | suggests those of Mediterranean descent have a lower breast cancer incidence | #2 |
diet naturally high in flavonol polyphenols including tea, vegetables (onion, broccoli), and fruit (apples, citrus) | neutral | - | breast cancer patients | - | recommend breast cancer patients consume | #3 |
At least five servings of vegetables and fruit daily | neutral | - | - | - | appear protective | #4 |
Moderate soy protein consumption (5-10 g daily) | neutral | - | breast cancer patients | 5-10 g daily | show the most promise | #5 |
the Mediterranean dietary pattern | neutral | - | breast cancer patients | - | show the most promise | #6 |
Evidence from numerous observational and clinical studies suggest that polyphenolic phytochemicals such as phenolic acids in olive oil, flavonols in tea, chocolate and grapes, and isoflavones in soy products reduce the risk of breast cancer. A dietary food pattern naturally rich in polyphenols is the Mediterranean diet and evidence suggests those of Mediterranean descent have a lower breast cancer incidence. Whilst dietary polyphenols have been the subject of breast cancer risk-reduction, this review will focus on the clinical effects of polyphenols on reducing recurrence. Overall, we recommend breast cancer patients consume a diet naturally high in flavonol polyphenols including tea, vegetables (onion, broccoli), and fruit (apples, citrus). At least five servings of vegetables and fruit daily appear protective. Moderate soy protein consumption (5-10 g daily) and the Mediterranean dietary pattern show the most promise for breast cancer patients. In this review, we present an overview of clinical trials on supplementary polyphenols of dietary patterns rich in polyphenols on breast cancer recurrence, mechanistic data, and novel delivery systems currently being researched.