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Smoking lowers chances of
surviving throat cancer
New York -
For people with cancer of the larynx or lower pharynx,
continuing to smoke or drink alcohol make it less likely that they'll
survive, while eating a diet rich in vegetables and vitamin C improves
their survival, a new study shows.
"One might think, now I that have
cancer, what's the point of stopping smoking? But there is clearly a
benefit in doing that; it will improve your survival," Dr. Rajesh P.
Dikshit commented to Reuters Health.
Tobacco smoking, alcohol drinking,
and diet have all been linked to the development of cancer in the
larynx, or voicebox, and the area immediately above it at the back of
the throat, the hypopharynx. However, little was known about the role
of these risk factors on the survival of patients with these cancers.
Dikshit,
working for the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon,
France, and his colleagues conducted a study to analyze the survival
of patients with laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer. They followed
931 patients who had enrolled in a previous cancer study that had
started in the early 80s, and analyzed the role of tobacco, alcohol
and diet on cancer outcome in these patients for up to 21 years.
As they report in the International
Journal of Cancer, the investigators found that smoking was the most
important factor adversely affecting the patient's survival,
particularly in those patients with tumors in the larynx.
"This is a very important finding,"
Dikshit told Reuters Health. "We knew that smoking is a cause of
laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer, but now it's clear that it
affects survival as well." Alcohol consumption also had a negative
effect on survival, but to a lesser extent than tobacco.
But the most important result,
Dikshit remarked, was the protective effect of some diet components.
"We found that a high intake of vitamin C significantly improved the
patients' survival."
The investigators also found a strong
protective effect of a diet rich in vegetables, but not of the
individual components found in those vegetables. Only vitamin C was
protective on its own.
"The message here is that it is very
important to stop smoking even after developing laryngeal and
hypopharyngeal cancer," Dikshit said.
Eating vegetables and vitamin C is
also something cancer patients should consider. "Doctors are
prescribing this already, but now we have demonstrated that these diet
components improve the patient's survival, and perhaps make the
treatment more effective." --
Reuters
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