| Literature DB >> 33003518 |
Maria G Grammatikopoulou1, Konstantinos Gkiouras1,2, Stefanos Τ Papageorgiou2, Ioannis Myrogiannis2, Ioannis Mykoniatis3,4, Theodora Papamitsou5, Dimitrios P Bogdanos1,6, Dimitrios G Goulis7.
Abstract
The quest for dietary patterns and supplements efficient in down-regulating prostate-specific antigen (PSA) concentrations among men with prostate cancer (PCa) or increased PCa risk has been long. Several antioxidants, including lycopene, selenium, curcumin, coenzyme Q10, phytoestrogens (including isoflavones and flavonoids), green tea catechins, cernitin, vitamins (C, E, D) and multivitamins, medicinal mushrooms (Ganoderma lucidum), fruit extracts (saw palmetto, cranberries, pomegranate), walnuts and fatty acids, as well as combined supplementations of all, have been examined in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in humans, on the primary, secondary, and tertiary PCa prevention level. Despite the plethora of trials and the variety of examined interventions, the evidence supporting the efficacy of most dietary factors appears inadequate to recommend their use.Entities:
Keywords: BPH; Serenoa repens; benign prostate hyperplasia; dietary supplements; genistein; malignancy; obesity; polyphenols; prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; resveratrol; sulforaphane
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33003518 PMCID: PMC7600271 DOI: 10.3390/nu12102985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
RCTs examining the effect of lycopene ONS, or the consumption of tomato-products on the PSA concentrations among men with PCa, increased PCa risk, or BPH.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ansari [ | IN | NR | 6 mo | 1. Orchidectomy ( | At 6 mo, a reduction in PSA was noted in both arms, but at 2 yrs, it was higher in the lycopene arm. More men on lycopene had a complete PSA response. | |
| Kucuk [ | US | NR | 3 wks until prostatectomy | 1. Tomato extract (30 mg of lycopene) ( | Subjects in the tomato arm had lower PSA. | |
| Kumar [ | US | Double-blind | From biopsy to prostatectomy (approx. 30 d) | 1. Lycopene (15 mg) ( | No difference was noted in PSA concentrations between treatment arms. | |
| Bunker [ | US | Open-label | 4 mo | 1. Lycopene (30 mg) + MV ( | PSA declined during the 1st mo but returned to baseline concentrations by mo 4. The PSA response was identical in both groups. | |
| Schwarz [ | DE | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Lycopene (15 mg) ( | Supplementation decreased PSA concentrations in the intervention group. |
AC, Afro-Caribbean; BPH, benign prostate hyperplasia; HGPIN, high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; MV, multivitamin; NR, not reported; ONS, oral nutrient supplement; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCTs, randomized controlled trials.
RCTs examining the effect of selenium ONS on the PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stratton † [ | US | Double-blind | Up to 5 yrs | 1. Se (200 μg/d) ( | Adjustment for age, BMI, baseline Se and PSA, smoking, race, PSA method, and Gleason score, PSA velocities for the two treatment arms did not different from the placebo. | |
| Algotar Š [ | US | Double-blind | Up to 5 yrs | 1. Se (200 µg) ( | PSA velocity in the Se arms did not differ from the placebo group. |
BMI, body mass index; DRE, digital rectal examination; ONS, oral nutrient supplement; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials; Se, selenium. † phase II trial; Š phase III trial.
RCTs examining the effect of curcumin ONS on PSA concentrations among men with PCa.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choi [ | KR | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Oral curcumin (1.44 g/d) ( | The % of patients with PSA progression was lower in the curcumin arm. PSA did not differ. | |
| Hejazi [ | IR | NR | 3 mo | 1. Oral curcumin (3 g/d) ( | PSA concentrations were reduced below 0.2 ng/mL in both groups. |
EBRT, external beam radiation therapy; IAD, intermittent androgen deprivation; NR, not reported; ONS, oral nutrient supplement; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials.
RCTs examining the effect of phytoestrogen ONS on PSA concentrations among men with PCa, or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lazarevic † [ | NO | Double-blind | 3–6 wks until prostatectomy | 1. 30 mg synthetic genistein ( | Serum PSA was indifferent between groups. In the genistein arm, PSA in tumor and normal tissue were akin. | |
| Dalais [ | AU | Double-blind | Approx. ° 25 d | 1. Bread with 50 g of HT soy grits ( | Differences were noted between the HT soy grits arm and the control (wheat) group on the % Δ total PSA and the % Δ in free/total PSA ratio. | |
| Kumar † [ | US | Double blind | 3–6 wks to prostatectomy | 1. Aglycone isoflavones (40 mg) ( | Change in PSA was not significant. | |
| Kumar ∞ [ | US | NR | from biopsy to prostatectomy (30 ± 3 d) | 1. Isoflavones (40 mg) ( | Changes in serum PSA were not significant. | |
| Hamilton-Reeves [ | US | Double blind | up to 6 wks to prostatectomy | 1. Soy isoflavone capsules (80 mg/d of total isoflavones) ( | Changes in serum PSA were not significant. | |
| Kumar [ | US | Double-blind | 12 wk | 1. Isoflavones (60 mg/d) ( | No difference was noted in free or total PSA between groups. | |
| Bylund [ | SE | NR | 3 wk | 1. 295 g of rye bran bread ( | The changes in PSA were not significant. | |
| Landberg ‡ [ | SE | NR | 6 wk each, | 1. 485 g rye whole grain and bran products (50% TEI) ( | Total PSA did not change from baseline, but it was lower at 2 wk in the rye whole grain arm. | |
| Cipolla [ | FR | Double-blind | 8 mo | 1. Mo 1–6: sulforaphane (60 mg); Mo 7–8: no ONS ( | PSADT was 86% longer in the intervention group. PSA increases >20% (6 mo) were greater in the placebo (71.8%). | |
| Bosland [ | US | Double-blind | 2 yr | 1. Soy PRO ( | 28.3% of men developed biochemical recurrence within 2 yrs (NS). | |
| Urban [ | US | Double-blind | 6 wks | 1. Soy PRO beverages twice/d (with 42 mg genistein and 27 mg daidzein and other micronutrients) ( | The changes in PSA were not significant. | |
| Adams [ | US | Double-blind | 12 mo | 1. Soy PRO drink (83 mg/d isoflavones) ( | Serum PSA concentrations increased in both groups over the intervention, with changes being akin. | |
| Kjaer [ | DK | Double-blind | 4 mo | 1. Resveratrol (150 mg/d) | Prostate size and concentrations of PSA, testosterone, free testosterone and DHT remained unchanged. | |
| Maskarinec ‡ [ | US | Open-label | 3 mo | 1. High soy diet ( | A 14% decline in serum PSA concentrations (NS) was observed with the high soy diet compared with the low. |
Δ, change; DHT, dihydrotestosterone; HT, heat-treated; MetS, metabolic syndrome; NOD, not other defined; NS, not significant; ONS, oral nutrient supplement; PCa, prostate cancer; PRO, protein; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSADT, prostate-specific antigen doubling time; RCT, randomized controlled trials; TEI, total energy intake. ∞ phase I trial; † phase II trial; ‡ cross-over trial; ° exact mean duration was not reported.
RCTs examining the effect of green tea and/or GTC supplementation on PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henning † [ | US | Open-label | d-33, d-31, and d-29, respectively in each group | 1. 6 cups/d of brewed green tea ( | A small decrease was noted in serum PSA concentrations among green tea drinkers, compared with the controls. | |
| Nguyen [ | US | Double-blind | 3–6 wks until prostatectomy | 1. PolyE ∂ (800 mg EGCG) ( | No difference was noted in PSA concentrations between groups. | |
| Wang [ | US | NR | 3–6 wks until prostatectomy | 1. 6 cups green tea/d ( | PSA results were not reported. | |
| Kumar [ | US | Double-blind | 1 yr | 1. PolyE ∂ (a mixture of GTCs with 400 mg EGCG)/d ( | A decrease in serum PSA was observed on the PolyE arm. | |
| Bettuzzi [ | IT | Double-blind | 1 yr | 1. 3 × 200 mg GTCs caps | PSA did not change between the two arms. | |
| Micali † [ | IT | Double-blind | 1 yr | 1. GTCs (600 mg/d) ( | A reduction was noted in PSA of the GTCs arm at 6 and 12 mo. |
ASAP, atypical small acinar proliferation; CI, confidence intervals; EGCG, (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate; GTCs, green-tea catechins; HGPIN, high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; PCa, prostate cancer; PolyE, polyphenon E; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials. † phase II trial; ∂ contains 85–95% total catechins, 56–72% as EGCG, and <1.0% caffeine.
RCTs examining the effect of fruit and fruit extract supplementation on PSA concentrations among men with PCa, increased PCa risk, or BPH.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Student [ | CZ | Double-blind | 30 d | 1. Cranberry fruit powder (1.5 g) ( | Serum PSA concentrations decreased by 22.5% in the cranberry intervention arm. | |
| Vidlar [ | CZ | NR | 6 mo | 1. Dried powdered cranberries (0.5 g/d) ( | The cranberry group experienced a reduction in PSA concentrations on d 180. | |
| Spettel [ | US | Double-blind | 3 mo | 1. Concord grape juice (240 mL/d) ( | No statistical difference was observed between groups by PSA. | |
| Freedland † [ | US | Double-blind | 4 wks | 1. 2 x 2 POMx caps (each, 0.6 g polyphenols) ( | No differences between arms in pre-surgical PSA or the ratio of baseline/pre-surgery PSA. | |
| Stenner-Liewen [ | CH | Double-blind | 4 wks | 1. Pomegranate juice 500 mL/d ( | No differences were detected regarding PSA kinetics. | |
| Pantuck [ | US | Double-blind | 12 mo | 1. 8 oz liquid POMx (1.6 mmol polyphenols/d) ( | POMx did not prolong PSADT (crude PSA concentrations not compared). | |
| Paller † [ | US | Double-blind | 18 mo | 1. POMx (1 g/d) ( | POMx was associated with ≥6 mo higher PSADT (no crude PSA concentrations reported). | |
| Ryu [ | KR | Open-label | 1 yr | 1. Tamsulosin (0.2 mg/d) + saw palmetto (320 mg/d) ( | No differences were noted in PSA concentrations among patients between groups. | |
| Barry [ | US | Double-blind | 72 wks | 1. Saw palmetto (320 mg, wks 0–24; 640 mg, wks 24–48; 960 mg, wks 48–72) ( | No difference was recorded in the PSA concentrations between groups. | |
| Bent [ | US | Double-blind | 1 yr | 1. Saw palmetto extract (2 × 160 mg/d) ( | No difference in the PSA concentrations between groups. | |
| Debruyne [ | MC | Double-blind | 12 mo | 1. Tamsulosin (0.4 mg/d) ( | PSA remained stable without differences between groups. | |
| Carraro [ | FR | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Saw palmetto extract (320 mg) ( | PSA concentrations fell after 13 wks of finasteride but remained stable with saw palmetto. | |
| Argirović [ | RS | NR | 6 mo | 1. Tamsulosin (0.4 mg) ( | No differences in the PSA concentrations were recorded between groups. |
AUA, American Urological Association; BPH, benign prostate hyperplasia; eq, equivalent; LUTS, lower urinary tract symptoms; mc, multi-country; PCa, prostate cancer; POMx, pomegranate extract; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSADT, prostate-specific antigen doubling time; RCT, randomized controlled trials; † phase II trial.
RCTs examining the effect of vitamin D ONS on PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wagner [ | CA | Double-blind | 3–8 wks | 1. 400 IU vitamin D3 ( | Serum PSA was lower in the combined higher-dose groups (10,000 and 40,000 IU) at the end of the trial. | |
| Gee † [ | US | Open-label | 28 d | 1. 10 μg vitamin D2 ( | PSA was significantly lower on d-21 in the intervention, but indifferent at the LOCF. The expression of PSA in adenocarcinoma did not differ between groups. | |
| Attia † [ | US | Double-blind | 17.6 mo | 1. IV docetaxel (35 mg/m2 (days 1, 8, 15) + doxercalciferol ONS (10 mg, days 1–28) ( | No difference in the PSA response rate was noted between groups. | |
| Beer [ | US | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. IV docetaxel (36 mg/m2/wk) for 3 wks of a 4-wk cycle + 45 mg calcitriol taken 1 d before docetaxel ( | PSA responses were observed in 58% of calcitriol patients and 49% of placebo patients (NS). The median duration of PSA progression-free survival was 7.6 mo in the placebo group and 7.9 mo among calcitriol-treated patients. | |
| Safwat [ | EG | Open-label | 2 yrs | 1. Tamsulosin ( | Patients receiving vitamin D3 had reduced PSA concentrations at the end of the treatment period (0.27 ± 0.08 ng/mL). | |
| Chandler [ | US | Double-blind | 3 mo | 1. Placebo ( | No differences in free and total PSA were observed. | |
| Colli [ | IT | Double-blind | 12 wks | 1. Vitamin D3 analog (150 μg/d) ( | The change in PSA concentrations between groups was not significant. |
AIPCa, androgen-independent prostate cancer; BPH, benign prostatic hyperplasia; HGPIN, high grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; IU, international units; IV, intravenous; LOCF, last-observation carry forward; NOD, not other defined; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials; RRP, radical retropubic prostatectomy. † phase II trial.
RCTs examining the effect of vitamin C, or α-tocopherol ONS on PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lasalvia-Prisco [ | IT | NR | 42 d | 1. Vitamin C (5 g/m2/d) + menadione (50 mg/m2/d) on 7-d courses, beginning on d-1 and 22 ( | For group 1, the rise of PSA at d-15 and the fall of PSA at d 22, 29, 36, and 42 were different compared with the controls. | |
| Herná-andez [ | US | Double-blind | 18 mo | 1. 400 IU vitamin E ( | Tocopherol supplementation did not affect PSA. |
DRE, digital rectal examination; IU, international units; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials.
RCTs examining the effect of combined antioxidant supplementation on PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paur [ | NO | Single-blind | 3 wks | 1. Tomato products (30 mg lycopene/d) ( | No differences in the PSA concentrations between the intervention and control groups were noted. | |
| Grainger [ | US | NR | 8 wks | 1. Wks 0–4: Tomato products (no soy) (>25 mg of lycopene/d). Wks 4–8: a combined tomato-rich diet and soy ONS ( | A reduction in % PSA concentrations was noted in the tomato (25%) and soy (43%) groups without any statistics being presented between groups. | |
| Hoenjet [ | NL | Double-blind | 21 wks | 1. vitamin E (350 mg), Se (200 μg), vitamin C (750 mg), CoQ10 (200 mg) ( | ONS with a combination of vitamin E, Se, vitamin C and CoQ10 did not affect serum PSA concentrations. | |
| Oh †,‡ [ | US | NR | NR | 1. 3x3 PC-SPES caps with contained 320 mg of herbal combination ( | Among those treated with PC-SPES, 6/16 patients had decreases in PSA. Among those treated with DES, 2/8 patients had a decrease in PSA, though neither achieved a 50% PSA response. | |
| Kranse ‡ [ | NL | Double-blind | 6 wk each arm with washout | 1. Margarine [with plant estrogens (1.5 g), Vitamin E (50 mg), Se (0.2 mg)], carotenoids (10 mg lutein, 10 mg lycopene, 10 mg palm carotenoids), green tea (6 cups), isoflavones (100 mg phytoestrogens, 60 mg genistein, 40 mg daidzein) ( | Total PSADT was unaffected. Free PSA increased during the placebo phase and decreased during the supplement period. | |
| DeVere White [ | US | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Genistein (450 mg), daidzein (300 mg), other isoflavones ( | PSA concentrations did not change in either group after intervention. | |
| Thomas [ | GB | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Broccoli powder (100 mg) + turmeric (100 mg) + pomegranate (100 mg) + green tea 5:1 extract (10 mg) ( | A lower rise in PSA was observed in the supplement group, as opposed to the placebo. | |
| Yoshimura [ | JP | Open-label | 6 mo | 1. Senseiro ( | No partial response in terms of PSA was observed. At 12 mo after entry, the PSADT of the Senseiro group was not prolonged and that of the Rokkaku Reishi arm was marginally prolonged compared with baseline values. | |
| Vidlal [ | CZ | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Silymarin (570 mg) + Se (240 μg) ( | No difference in the PSA was noted between groups. | |
| Van Die [ | AU | Double-blind | 12 wks | 1. 2 × 2 caps/daily containing curcumin (100 mg), resveratrol (120 mg), GTC (100 mg) + 2 × 2 caps broccoli (equivalent to 2 g fresh sprouts) ( | The active treatment arm experienced a non-significant increase in the log-slope of PSA, and the placebo arm experienced no change in the log-slope of PSA. | |
| Schröder ‡ [ | NL | Double-blind | 10 wks each, 4-wk washout | 1. Soy, isoflavones, lycopene, silymarin, antioxidants ( | A 2.6-fold increase in PSADT from 445 to 1150 d was recorded for the supplement and placebo periods, respectively. | |
| Gontero † [ | IT | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Lycopene (35 mg), Se (55 µg), and GTCs (600 mg) ( | No significant variations in PSA concentrations were observed. | |
| Vostalova [ | CZ | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Se (240 μg) + silymarin (570 mg) ( | A significant reduction in PSA in the intervention group was observed. | |
| Fleshner [ | US | Double-blind | 3 yrs | 1. 2× soy protein (20 g), vitamin E (400 IU), Se (100 μg) | No differences were recorded in the PSA concentrations of participants between the two arms. | |
| Vaishampayan [ | US | NR | 6 mo | 1. 2 × 1 tomato extract caps (15 mg of lycopene) ( | No decline in serum PSA was noted in either group. | |
| Lane † [ | GB | Double-blind (caps), single-blind (foods) | 6 mo | 1. Green tea drink (3 cups, unblinded) ( | PSA concentrations did not differ between lycopene, green tea, or placebo groups at 6 months. | |
| Morgia Š [ | IT | Double-blind | 1 yr | 1. Saw palmetto (320 mg), Se and lycopene ( | No differences in terms of mean changes in PSA between the groups were noted. | |
| Suardi [ | IT | Double-blind | 3 mo before surgery | 1. Saw palmetto, quercetin and β-sitosterol ( | No differences were noted in the PSA of the two groups. | |
| Morgia [ | IT | NR | 6 mo | 1a. Saw palmetto, Se and lycopene ( | Mean PSA was reduced in group 1a as compared with the controls (1b). | |
| Ide [ | JP | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Curcumin (100 mg/d) + isoflavones (40 mg) ( | PSA concentrations decreased in patients with baseline PSA ≥ 10 treated with isoflavones and curcumin. | |
| Meyer [ | CA | Double-blind | 8 yrs | 1. Vitamin C (120 mg), α-tocopherol (30 mg), β-carotene (6 mg), Se (100 μg), and Zn (20 mg) ( | Supplementation did not affect PSA concentrations. Among men with normal PSA on ONS, a reduction in the rate of PCa was noted. In those with elevated PSA at baseline, ONS was associated with an increased PCa incidence of borderline significance. | |
| Klein [ | US | Double-blind | 7–12 yrs | 1. Se (200 μg/d) ( | 2/3 of the men in each of the 4 groups had elevated PSA (NS). No difference was observed in the PSA velocity each consecutive year between groups. Vitamin E ONS increased the risk of PCa. | |
| Marks [ | US | Double-blind | 6 mo | 1. Saw palmetto (106 mg) + herbs (nettle root, pumpkin) ( | A lack of a change in serum PSA was noted. | |
| Preuss [ | US | Double-blind | 3 mo | 1. Cernitin, saw palmetto, B-sitosterol, vitamin E ( | The PSA scores showed no differences when comparing the intervention and placebo groups. |
AS, active surveillance; ASAP, atypical small acinar proliferation; BPH, benign prostate hyperplasia; CI, confidence intervals; CoQ10, coenzyme Q10; DES, Diethylstilbestrol; DRE, digital rectal examination; EGCG, (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate; GTCs, green-tea catechins; HGPIN, high grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; HR, hazard ratio; IU, international units; LUTS, lower urinary tract symptoms; MC, multi-county; mHGPIN, multifocal high grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; NS, not significant; PCa, prostate cancer; PCI, prostatic chronic inflammation; PIN, prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSADT, prostate-specific antigen doubling time; RCT, randomized controlled trials; Se, selenium; Zn, zinc. † phase II trial; Š post-hoc analysis; ‡ cross-over trial.
RCTs examining the effect of fatty acids supplementation, or frequent intake of foods rich in fatty acids, on serum PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan [ | US | Double-blind | 3 mo | 1. 3 × 1 g fish oil caps/d (1098 mg EPA + 549 mg DHA) ( | No difference was observed in Δ PSA concentrations post-intervention, between lycopene or fish oil. | |
| Higashihara [ | JP | NR | 2 yrs | 1. EPA (2.4 g/d) ( | The recurrence-free survival rate did not differ between groups. | |
| Simon ‡ [ | US | NR | 6 mo each arm (4 mo washout) | 1. Walnut consumption (35 g/d, 12% TEI) ( | No difference was observed in the PSA concentrations. | |
| Spaccarotella ‡ [ | US | NR | 8 wks | 1. Usual diet + walnut ONS (75 g/d) isocaloric to habitual diet ( | A linear mixed model revealed that, although PSA was unchanged, the ratio of free:total PSA was increased. | |
| Brouwer [ | NL | Double-blind | 40 mo | 1. ALA (2 g/d) in margarine spreads ( | Mean serum PSA increased by 0.42 ng/mL in the placebo group and by 0.52 ng/mL in the ALA group (NS). | |
| Hamazaki [ | JP | NR | 12 wks | 1. EPA (2.4 g/d) ( | No differences were observed in the PSA concentrations between the two groups. |
ALA, alpha-linolenic acid; AS, active surveillance; CI, confidence intervals; CHO, carbohydrates; CoQ10, coenzyme Q10; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; GLA, γ-linolenic acid; LFFO, low fat/fish oil; MI, myocardial infarction; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; PCa, prostate cancer; PRO, proteins; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RCT, randomized controlled trials; TEI, total energy intake. ‡ cross-over trial.
RCTs examining the effect of dietary patterns on serum PSA concentrations among men with PCa or increased PCa risk.
| First Author | Origin | Masking | Duration | Patients | Interventions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hébert [ | US | Open-label | 6 mo | 1. Diet (low meat and dairy, increased intake of whole grains, soybeans and by-products, other beans, and vegetables), PA (45-min sessions), and stress reduction sessions ( | No difference in Δ PSA was noted by intervention status. Men increasing their fruit intake experienced no PSA rise. | |
| Demark-Wahnefried [ | US | Single-blind | until prostatectomy (30.7 d) | 1. Usual diet ( | Over the presurgical study period serum PSA decreased in all arms, with no differences in change observed between arms. | |
| Ornish [ | US | NR | 1 yr | 1. Intensive lifestyle program promoting a vegan diet, supplemented with soy (1 serv of tofu + 58 g fortified soy PRO drink), fish oil (3 g/d), vitamin E (400 IU/d), Se (200 μg/d), and vitamin C (2 g/d), moderate aerobic PE (walking 30 min, 6 d/wk), stress management (yoga-based stretching, breathing, meditation, imagery, relaxation for a 60 min/d), and 1-h support group once weekly to enhance adherence to the intervention. Diet: fruits, vegetables, whole grains (complex CHO), legumes, and soy products, low in simple CHO and with 10% fat ( | Changes in serum PSA from baseline to 12 mo were different between groups, with favorable changes in the experimental group. Serum PSA decreased (0.25 ng/mL, or 4%) from baseline in the treatment arm, but increased in the control group. | |
| Kellogg Parsons [ | US | Single-blind | 2 yr | 1. Counseling behavioral intervention by phone promoting the intake of ≥7 vegetable serv/d ( | There were no significant differences in TTP between groups. | |
| Aronson † [ | US | Single-blind | 4–6 wks | 1. Western diet (40% fat, 15% PRO, 45% CHO, 15 g fiber/d, n-6:n-3 FA ratio of 15:1) ( | No differences were noted in the PSA concentrations of participants in the two groups. | |
| Aronson [ | US | NR | 4 wks | 1. High-fiber LFD (15% fat, 30% PRO, 55% CHO), 35 g soy PRO/d, and 35 g fiber/d) ( | No differences were observed in the PSA concentrations. | |
| Antwi [ | US | NR | 6 mo | 1. Dietary modifications, PA, and mindfulness-based stress reduction training, including shopping guidelines ( | No differences were observed in the PSA concentrations between participating groups. | |
| Tariq [ | CA | NR | 4 mo | 1. Diet high in soluble fiber (approx. 25–30 g fiber/1000 kcal, ≤20% fat, ≤20% PRO, ≥60% CHO) ( | Serum PSA concentration was lower with the soluble than the insoluble fiber diet. | |
| Freedland [ | US | NR | 6 mo | 1. LCD (≤20g CHO/d) plus walking (≥30 min for ≥5 d/wk) | No differences were observed in the PSA concentrations. | |
| Freedland [ | US | NR | 6 mo | n = 34 men with PCa and BCR after local treatment | 1. LCD (≤20g CHO/d) ( | PSA values did not differ between groups. The proportion of patients with slowed PSADT was greater in the LCD arm. |
| Li [ | US | NR | 4 yr | 1. LFD (15% fat), high-fiber (18 g/1000 kcal) diet supplemented with 40 g soy PRO + individual counseling sessions ( | No significant changes in PSA were reported between groups. | |
| Carmody [ | US | NR | 3 mo | 1. 11 dietary and cooking classes (emphasizing plant-based foods and fish -salmon-, vegetables-, cruciferous varieties-, and whole grains, as well as soy foods, with avoidance of meat, poultry, and dairy) ( | No change was found in the rate of PSA increase between the two groups; the mean PSADT for the intervention participants was substantially longer. | |
| Shike [ | US | NR | 2 yrs | 1. Intensive counseling towards an LFD, high in fiber, fruits, and vegetables ( | No difference was observed in the distributions of the PSA slopes, the PSA slopes per se, or the % of high PSA concentrations between groups. The incidence of PCa at 4 yrs was similar. | |
| Eastham Š [ | US | Open-label | 4 yrs | 1. LFD high in fiber, fruits, and vegetables ( | No difference was noted in serum PSA concentrations by dietary intervention. |
ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; ALA, alpha-linolenic acid; AS, active surveillance; BCR, biochemical recurrence; CI, confidence intervals; CHO, carbohydrates; CoQ10, coenzyme Q10; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; DRE, digital rectal examination; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; FA, Fatty acids; GLA, γ-linolenic acid; LCD, Low-carbohydrate diet; LFD, Low-fat diet; LFFO, low fat/fish oil; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; PCa, prostate cancer; PE, physical exercise; PRO, proteins; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSADT, prostate-specific antigen doubling time; RCT, randomized controlled trials; TEI, total energy intake; TTP, time to progression (PSA ≥ 10 ng/mL); USDA, United States Department of Agriculture. † phase II trial; ‡ cross-over trial; Š post-hoc analysis.