Wednesday, June 18, 2025

6 Things to Eat to Reduce Your Cancer Risk

Growing up in Scotland, Nigel Brockton envisioned one day becoming a marine biologist. But after battling a rare and deadly cancer twice before finishing college, he turned to cancer research, determined to help others reduce their risk.

He was ahead of his time. Back then in the early 1990s, despite the American Cancer Society focusing on cancer prevention, many people thought that people got cancer mainly because of inherited genes and bad luck, like being struck like lightning, Brockton says. Non-scientists may still think that way, but research is painting a different picture: about 40 % of all cancers could be thwarted by mitigating certain risk factors, especially through a healthier lifestyle.

Nutrition plays a big role in this lifestyle. Brockton, a cancer epidemiologist for the nonprofit American Institute for Cancer Research, and other scientists have studied links between unhealthy eating and increased cancer risk, and nutritious substitutes to reduce this risk. Meanwhile, cancer is on the rise among Americans under age 50. “By eating more of the good stuff, we have less of the bad,” Brockton says, “and we can start to turn the tide.” 

Choose the right patterns

When Brockton’s career began, researchers were seeking a “magic bullet”—one or two foods that, eaten consistently, could protect cells from turning cancerous. However, “we now know the full dietary package is what matters,” Brockton says. “It’s much more important than individual foods.”

The right dietary patterns help the body suppress mechanisms that lead to cancer: obesity, chronic inflammation, high blood sugar, a poorly functioning immune system, and an unhealthy microbiome—the tiny organisms in the gut.

The best patterns include Mediterranean, vegetarian, and pescovegetarian diets, loaded with plant-based proteins and fibers. They differ radically found in the Standard American Diet, or SAD, dominated by red meat and refined sugars that fuel rather than foil cancer’s mechanisms. 

Yet “nearly the entire U.S. population” eats a SAD, according to the National Cancer Institute. 

Swapping a better dietary pattern drops the average person’s cancer risk by 8-9%, researh shows. A lean body weight reduces it by another 7-8%. Recent research  using a scoring system  developed by NCI and Brockton’s organization, AICR, shows how adopting an overall healthy lifestyle that includes eating more nutritious foods has the biggest effect on bringing down cancer risk, compared to any one specific healthy behavior.

Here are some of the most impactful substitutions. 

EAT LESS: Ultra-processed carbs 

EAT MORE: Healthier carbs

Whole foods with plenty of fiber can help reduce cancer risk. “Fiber is my favorite nutrient for cancer prevention,” says Carrie Daniel-MacDougall, a cancer epidemiologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center. 

Plucked directly from nature, many plant foods provide carbs with a healthy dose of fiber, but frequently the fiber is diminished through ultra-processing en route to your plate. Low-fiber foods, processed with dozens of ingredients, are a sadly common feature of SAD. Examples include instant oatmeal packets, pita bread, white rice, and pasta made from refined flour. If your carbs come mostly from packages with long ingredient lists, you’re likely not getting sufficient fiber to reduce cancer risk.

Trade these carbs for whole plant foods like beans, lentils, and other legumes with high ratios of fiber to carbs. Lentils, for example, can offer 11 grams of fiber per serving. Daniel-MacDougall and her colleagues found links between high-fiber intake and longer survival for cancer patients—and, in animals, fiber increased anti-cancer immune cells. This suggests fiber impedes cancer growth, at least in part, by strengthening the immune system.

If you think of cancer as a trap with several blades, each representing a different mechanism by which the disease grows, fiber seems to have a dulling effect on each sharp point. One blade is immune dysfunction. Another is obesity, which promotes the spread of cancer cells by causing chronic inflammation, among other problems. People who are overweight have higher rates of  13 kinds of cancer.

Studies suggest that diets with ample fiber support a healthier weight—partly because fiber promotes feelings of fullness and less overeating. “It’s important to keep weight within your normal BMI range throughout life,” says Dr. Kala Visvanathan, a Johns Hopkins medical oncologist and cancer epidemiologist. “Data show that even 10 pounds less can help bring down cancer risk.”

Daniel-MacDougall notes that fiber can parry another of cancer’s blades: an unhealthy microbiome. Fiber nourishes the beneficial bacteria in the gut. This supports a thriving microbiome, which lowers inflammation, according to Daniel-MacDougall’s research. 

You don’t have to shun your favorite low-fiber carbs; try having smaller portions. Daniel-MacDougall has researched ways of combining them with higher-fiber options. One intriguing combination: whip white beans or chickpeas into lower-fiber mashed potatoes, while using only half the potato. Some of Daniel-MacDougall’s research participants “wouldn’t touch beans with a 10-foot pole” before they started the trial, she says. That changed with the hidden beans trick. “Now you’re having a dish that’s higher in fiber as well as protein.”

LESS: Lots of red or fake meat

MORE: True plant-based proteins

The classic American dinner plate stars a 10-ounce slab of red meat. Its supporting cast members are buttered mashed potatoes and starchy vegetables like peas. Viewed through the prism of cancer risk, this home-style favorite raises multiple red flags. 

“We see a very consistent association between higher red meat consumption and higher cancer risk,” Brockton says. Steak contains a form of iron that, if eaten frequently over many years, may cause chronic inflammation and damage in the digestive system, raising the risk of colorectal cancer, the 3rd most common type.

 

 

 

 

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