The Dr. Hyman Show - Cancer-Fighting Foods: What to Eat to Stay Healthy | Dr. Mark Hyman
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Cancer rates are on the rise, but what you eat can make all the difference. In this episode, I explore the powerful relationship between food and cancer risk. From cutting down on sugar and processed ...foods to boosting your intake of anti-cancer superfoods like cruciferous vegetables and mushrooms, I’ll walk you through why a whole-food, nutrient-dense diet is your best defense against this disease. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Manukora Honey, and Eudemonia. Streamline your lab orders with Rupa Health. Access more than 3,500 specialty lab tests and register for a FREE live demo at RupaHealth.com. Get your Manukora Honey Starter Kit today! Just head to Manukora.com/Hyman, to get $25 off. For the full lineup and to purchase a ticket, visit Eudemonia.net.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
And vitamin D itself is anti-cancer.
Lots of herbs and spices are also great.
Rosemary, oregano, thyme, basil, bay leaf, garlic, parsley.
Just think about it.
Your kitchen is your pharmacy.
Your kitchen is your anti-cancer headquarters, okay?
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Welcome back to another episode
of the Doctors' Pharmacy and Health Bites,
where we take juicy little bites
into current health topics.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and today we're diving into a topic
that's crucial for all of us, how our diet can help prevent cancer. Cancer rates are on the rise,
especially among young people, and understanding the connection between what we eat and our risk
for this disease is more important than ever. We're going to explore the many root causes of
cancer, including the significant role of chronic inflammation. This isn't just about big, obvious triggers,
but also the everyday factors like poor diet, environmental toxins, and even stress.
But don't worry, it's not all bad news. I'll explain how you can use food as medicine
to fight back against these risks. From eating a variety of
colorful veggies and fiber-rich whole grains to incorporating antioxidant-packed spices,
we'll cover practical, tasty ways to nourish your body and reduce your cancer risk. So join me as
we unlock the powerful connection between diet and cancer prevention and discover how you can
take control of your health with every meal. So let's jump right in. First, let's talk about what drives cancer
so we can better understand how we can use food
as medicine to help prevent it.
Now, there are many root causes of cancer.
Depends on the person, genetics,
and everything they're exposed to throughout their lifetime.
Something we call the exposome.
But chronic inflammation
is one of the most common drivers of cancer. Now, this is chronic
sterile inflammation, not infection. And it could be why cancer is on the rise in younger people.
The development and the progression of cancer, it happens downstream of chronic low-grade
inflammation. So how does that work? How does chronic inflammation drive cancer? Well, it creates a microenvironment that supports tumor development,
tumor growth, and tumor progression.
In other words, metastasis.
Inflammatory mediators, things like cytokines,
they promote DNA damage.
They inhibit something called apoptosis,
which is basically programmed cell death,
getting rid of damaged cells.
So it stops the process of actually getting rid
of all the cells that are gonna turn to cancer.
It also enhances angiogenesis,
which is the formation of new blood vessels
that supply tumors with blood and nutrients for growth,
which they need, otherwise they die
if they have no blood supply.
Inflammation processes can also cause changes to your DNA
through something called epigenetic modifications.
If you eat bad food and junk food and ultra processed food,
you are going to be silencing something called the tumor suppressor genes, genes that suppress cancer.
Or even worse, you're going to be activating genes that cause cancer called oncogenes. Oncology is
cancer. Oncogenes are cancer-causing genes. These are genetic mutations that turn on tumors, and
it's caused by what we're eating, and that further promotes cancer development. All right, so let's
back up a little bit and go into what causes chronic inflammation. So many things. First,
living in our modern world, just being alive today is an inflammatory state. We have a constant
exposure to environmental toxins, things that we never had before, like PFAS chemicals, bisphenol A or BPA, microplastics, and the list goes on and on. We're going to get into
some more of those. Poor diet or ultra-processed diet or sedentary lifestyle, the open prescribing
of drugs, just aging itself causes higher risk, leaky gut, food sensitivities, food allergies,
hormonal balances, and more. All these potentially drive inflammation. Now, Hippocrates once said that all disease begins in the gut. And for the purpose of this conversation,
we're going to follow his advice and start in the gut. So how do imbalances in your gut microbiome
lead to cancer? Now, this is really fascinating stuff. It's cutting edge stuff. So you're not
hearing about this everywhere, but we're going to get into it today. A healthy gut contains a whole diverse population of bugs, of microorganisms that play key roles in your digestion, in a nutrient
absorption, and your immune function. Why? Because 60% of your immune system lives in your gut. It's
right underneath the lining of your gut. Why? Because you're exposed to the outside world and
it's trying to protect you from all the bad stuff inside your gut, which is poop and food. Now, good gut bacteria
make something called postbiotics. You've heard of prebiotics like fiber or probiotics like
lactobacillus, but there's something called postbiotics. These are molecules, metabolites
of bacteria in your gut, and they can be good or bad. So they're called postbiotics, and they're made
by what you're eating and feeding the bacteria in your gut. Now, there's a lot of them, but some of
them are really important in regulating cancer. For example, butyrate is a anti-cancer compound
made by your microbiome when you have good bugs in there. You can also make other compounds like
acetate and propionate. These are metabolized that are produced by bacterial fermentation of fiber and all the polyphenols, all those colorful compounds
in veggies and fruits that supports the integrity of the gut lining. And the gut lining is so
important because without a healthy gut lining, basically all that poop and food is leaking into
your bloodstream and causing your immune system to go crazy. Now these metabolites, they're called
short-chain fatty acids. They have anti-cancer properties. They regulate our immune system.
They help fight inflammation. And when there's a good balance of these microorganisms, that's great.
But when that balance is disrupted, it leads to an overgrowth of the bad bacteria and a reduction
in the beneficial bacteria. So it's like getting weeds in your garden.
The good plants, they get crowded out by the bad weeds, right?
And bad bacteria are bad because they release poisons, toxins.
We call them endotoxins.
That just means an internal toxin. And those endotoxins get into your system through a leaky gut,
and they also cause a leaky gut, and they cause inflammation.
And the imbalances in your gut microbiome that cause this problem is called dysbiosis. Now,
dysbiosis can compromise the integrity of the gut lining. It makes you have a leaky gut and leads
to something called increased intestinal permeability, and the basic lay term is leaky
gut. Now, basically, think about your
gut as one cell lining that protects you from the outside world. And the cells are stuck together
like Legos. They have something called tight junctions. When those are damaged, which happens
because of bad gut bacteria and all our processed food and emulsifiers and additives and all this
crap, you separate these cells and then the food and bacteria can
leak in between the cells and get into your bloodstream. And then right underneath your
gut lining is your immune system. So that's why this is such a big deal. And when you have this
leaky gut, it allows toxins and undigested food particles and pathogens, bacteria to enter the
bloodstream. And your body's like, wow, this is not me. That leads to an overactive immune system and chronic inflammation throughout the body.
And it affects everything, not just cancer, but everything, heart disease, cancer, diabetes,
dementia, literally everything.
Autoimmune disease, asthma, allergies, autism, ADD, depression, the list goes on and on and
on.
And we're talking about cancer here.
Now, the immune system responds to these foreign substances by what?
By doing what
it's supposed to do. It's like, this ain't me. It triggers an inflammatory response. So, it's bad
when you have bad bugs. And most of us have bad bugs in our gut. So, how does this standard
American diet, the SAD diet, disrupt our gut microbiome? Well, it's because it's so rich in bad stuff like ultra-processed foods,
which are energy dense, but they contain a lot of other stuff like added sugars, sweeteners,
refined grains, bad fats, toxins, actual literal toxins, chemical additives, preservatives, PFAS,
phthalates, things that are just poisons that damage the gut. Now, this feeds and grows the
bad bacteria,
and it reduces something called bacterial diversity.
You want an ecosystem like a rainforest,
complex, diverse, resilient.
You don't want a monocrop cornfield
that can go out just like that with some adversity.
And we are having a low bacterial diversity
in our modern world.
Now, beneficial bacteria, the good ones,
like bifidobacteria, lactobacilli, acromantia,
bacillibacterium, and rosaburia, they're lower. You don't have to remember all those names all
the way. I'm just telling you because it's all the bugs that are the good ones. You can get to
know them if you want. They're nice actually, but they're lower in abundance when you have a western
diet. So when you have all these bad foods, all the good bugs go down and you get less of these
good short-chain fatty acids, less of these good anti-cancer compounds that your gut naturally
produces. Now, in the other hand, when you eat this processed diet, it increases the abundance
of something called pro-inflammatory bacteria. These like Ruminococcus proteobacteria, which
produce pro-inflammatory compounds called LPS. LPS stands for lipopolysaccharides,
doesn't really matter. Basically, these are like poisons. And these bacteria produce these poisons
and they get into the system, they leak in and they start creating an inflammatory response.
Now, we can look at the gut in many ways. And I've seen so many stool tests. I used to call
me Dr. C every poop at my old job at Canyon Ranch because I looked at every stool test.
And we look at a lot of different factors. We can look at levels of bacteria. We can look at
levels of short-chain fatty acids. We can look at ratios of good and bad bacteria. But there's
a ratio of something called formicutes to bacteroides. When you have a high ratio of
formicutes to bacteroides, these are basically categories of bacteria, it is linked to obesity
and diabetes and metabolic disease. But a high
ratio has also been seen with breast cancer, colorectal cancer, and it's really important
to consider as a broader picture of the overall microbial diversity and your individual health
and genetics. Now, in a study that was titled Intake of Sugar and Food Source of Sugar and
Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Multi-Ethnic Cohort Study, blah, blah, blah, whatever.
I like these long names.
The researchers noted that total sugar, total fructose, glucose, and fructose, and maltose,
all different kinds of sugar, were associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer,
especially in younger people.
Now, this is interesting because colorectal cancer is the number one cause of cancer death among men under 50 and the number two leading cause
of cancer death in young women. Now, this isn't static. It's increasing by about 1% to 2% a year
in adults under 55. There's also a strong link between type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome,
obesity, and risk for colorectal,
hepatic, pancreatic, breast, endometrial, and lots of other cancers. Now, there's something else
that's really important here, which is we're all metabolically unhealthy. And there's an enormously
strong link between type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, obesity, and the risk for so many cancers that are
the most common cancers, like colorectal cancer,
liver or hepatic cancer, pancreatic cancer, breast cancer, endometrial or uterine cancer,
and many other cancers. In fact, 48% of all cancers are attributed to obesity, but I think
the number is probably a lot higher. And obesity, if you're overweight, is associated with a 40%
greater risk of early-onset colorectal cancer. That's from the Journal of Gastronology.
45% of adults 59 and younger are obese.
So a lot of people are at risk.
And studies show that diabetes significantly increases the risk of cancer
and that lots of people who have cancer have a high incidence of diabetes.
Now get this.
Up to 80% of pancreatic cancer patients
actually have type 2 diabetes or prediabetes or impaired glucose tolerance when they're diagnosed.
This is a deadly cancer. It's caused by our diet.
So what else do chronic diseases have in common? Well, insulin resistance. That's what we've just
been talking about. And you've heard me talk about it forever. I'm going to keep talking about it
because it's the cause of everything. Cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia. So how does
insulin resistance relate to cancer? Well, insulin is responsible for keeping our blood sugar balanced
and stable. Now, insulin is a growth hormone. It causes your fat cells to grow. It
causes your belly to grow, but it also binds to and causes cancer cells to grow. So eating a high
sugar, high starch, high glycemic diet causes our cells to become resistant to the effects of
insulin. And what does that do? Well, that leads your body to produce more and more insulin to keep your blood sugar normal. And these high levels of insulin, or what
we call hyperinsulinemia, increases the production of another molecule called IGF-1. That stands for
insulin-like growth factor 1. Now, it's a hormone that increases cell division, cell growth, and
inhibits autophagy or cellular cleanup.
Now, sometimes it's good.
It's like Goldilocks.
But when you have high levels of IGF-1 from all the sugar, it basically causes cells to
continue to grow and divide and prevents them from being killed, okay?
Now, high blood sugar is present in 39% to 99% of cancer cases.
And that leads to insulin resistance, oxidative stress,
chronic inflammation of the body.
It also creates something called
advanced glycation end products or AGES.
Now, glycation is a chemical reaction.
You're familiar with it.
When your chicken skin is crispy
or your bread has a crust on it
or when you get that creme brulee thing,
it's got that crispy thing on top,
that's called gly top, that's
called glycation.
It's when sugar and proteins or other fats bind together and form this basically compound
called ages or advanced glycation end products.
When these glycated products bind to DNA, they bind to proteins and lipids, it causes
something called the Mallard reaction, the Brownian reaction.
You've seen this.
But the problem is these accumulate in our tissue.
And they bind to something called RAGES, receptors for advanced glycation end products.
When they bind to those receptors, it activates a whole inflammatory cascade.
And that accelerates not only cancer, but also aging itself.
And there's lots of sources of ages in our diet.
We actually eat them on a regular basis, right? Ultra-processed food is a big source. Dry heat processing is one
way. Baked goods, cooking at high temperatures, brown, charred, fried, burnt foods. These ages
create damage to your blood vessels. They cause oxidative stress. They reduce blood flow. They
cause damage to your DNA, to your tissue, to your mitochondria. They're just bad. Now, you can kind of measure this
in the blood by something called hemoglobin A1c, which is essentially glycated hemoglobin.
It's your hemoglobin, which you can measure easily in your blood and see how much sugar is bound to
it. And that kind of gives you a rough idea. There's also an amazing new test called the
insulin resistance score from Quest, which
allows you to get a really good read on your degree of insulin resistance and how bad it
is because hemoglobin A and C is a late stage phenomena.
And it's great that you can do this test now.
And through Function Health, the company I co-founded to allow you access to your own
lab data through, you know, just going directly to a Quest lab and getting your data, very
simple process.
You can go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark to learn and sign up.
But the insulin resistance scores are really important because it really tells you what
your risk is.
Now, the test we commonly use in medicine now to look at glycation is called hemoglobin
A1c.
And if it's 6% or higher, it's associated with a high cancer risk in both diabetics
and non-diabetics.
And even a lower level may be a problem.
We find that even levels down to five
are probably optimal, but anything over five, you're starting to increase your risk for
heart disease and other things. So the cutoffs we have in medicine are arbitrary. We say six,
it's six and a half. It used to be 5.7. It's pre-diabetes, 5.5. I mean, it's all a moving
target because, you know, we're finding that at lower and lower levels, there's a problem. So
basically you want your hemoglobin A to C as low as possible.
Let's look at another big factor that causes cancer, fructose.
Now, fructose is something found in fruit, which is good, but it's not fruit we're talking
about here.
Epidemiologic or population studies, which don't prove cause and effect, but they found
strong associations between high fructose intake from sources like high fructose corn
syrup and increased risk of
pancreatic and colon cancers. Now, you have to realize we never had this stuff in our food
supply until the 70s. There was no high fructose corn syrup. Now, it's about 50% of our calories.
It's in everything. And it's got not 50-50 fructose and glucose like sugar. It might have
55% to 75% fructose, which has all these adverse effects. And it's free fructose.
Now, there's something called the fructose transporter, and this is called GLUT5. It's not about your glutes. It's
called GLUT5. And it's overexpressed in cancers like pancreatic, colorectal, breast, lung cancer.
Now, when you have high GLUT5 expression, it basically allows for increased intake or uptake
of fructose by cancer cells. And what does that do? That makes
them grow because they love the sugar. It causes them to migrate and move around, meaning starting
to spread, and invasion, meaning metastases. So where are we getting high fructose levels in our
diet? It's not from fruit. It's from added sugars and sweeteners like high fructose corn syrup,
sucrose, and fructose as sweeteners that are in all the ultra-processed food we eat. I mean, it's 60% of our diet is ultra-processed
food. So fructose in high fructose corn syrup and all the food adds is bad. So what else could be
causing cancer that's in our sad diet? Well, food additives. Over 10,000 chemicals are allowed in the food we eat in the United States.
10,000. And here's what's shocking. 99% of the food chemicals that have been introduced to our
food supply since 2000 were approved not by the government, not by the FDA, but approved by the
food and chemical companies that made them. It's like the fox guarding the hen house, right?
Since 2,756 new food chemicals have been added to our food supply through a loophole in the law
called GRAS, G-R-A-S. It stands for Generally Recognized as Safe. So it seems like, oh, it seems
like it's safe. Well, it doesn't seem to be killing anybody right now, so let's just put in the food
supply. Now, this GRAS loophole is a big deal. Food chemical companies exploit this
loophole, allowing them to make their own safety determinations for substances that they say are
generally recognized as safe. Now, the 1958 Food Addams Amendment intended for rigorous FDA review.
Meaning if you want to add some new chemical to the food,
the FDA has to review the science on this.
But this grass loophole basically has become the main approval route.
You basically take the company's word for it that it's safe.
How crazy is that, right?
When a company determines a substance as grass,
it means they think it's safe among, quote, qualified experts. So they get a bunch of experts, they pay, they say it's safe,
and then they submit a notice to the FDA. But the process is entirely voluntary. And the FDA can
review these notices and issue a, quote, no questions letter, but it doesn't actually approve
these substances or even affirm the company's safety data. So there's all this crap
on our food that got in there without any real oversight. Now, due to this loophole, harmful
ingredients have been added and continue to be added to our food supply. Let me give you an
example. Seven carcinogenic flavor ingredients were approved as grass by FEMA. This is the Flavor and Extract Manufacturers Association,
not a government group, an industry trade group. This is a group that reviews and approves nearly
all flavor ingredients. But these ingredients were later banned in 2018 after a petition
by the Environmental Working Group for being linked to cancer in animals. Now, I'm on the board of the Environmental Working Group, so I've been part of this.
I get it. It's really bad.
Now, food additives are commonly used to enhance the flavor of baked goods,
ice cream, candy, chewing gum, beverages, all kinds of stuff.
And they got weird chemical names, benzophenone, ethylacrylate, pyridine, styrene.
Do you have these in your cupboard at home that you cook with? I doubt it, right? The term flavor is this vague label that food manufacturers use to hide chemical
names from consumers. It's deliberate. They say it's got natural flavorings, artificial flavorings,
blah, blah, blah. You don't even know what it is, right? A lot of other grass substances,
which are not approved in other countries, include BHA, which is classified as reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen
by the National Toxicology Program, right? BHT or butylated hydroxy toluene. Would you put that
in your salad? It's in everything. And that has been determined to disrupt endocrine function
by causing change to the thyroid and also affects animal development and fetal development. Now,
BHT is in everything. It's in cereal, chewing gum, potato chips, vegetable oil, baked goods, cakes, biscuits,
crackers, pastries, everywhere. And it's banned in Europe. We're going to get to that in a minute.
There's another thing we have to think about with food, which are the toxins in food, pesticides,
and all other toxins. So how do you avoid those? Well, avoid processed and packaged foods. All
that BPA is in the plastics and in the cans, in the packaging.
Phthalates, the forever chemicals, PFAS, microplastics that leach into our food from packaging,
from the manufacturing processes.
It's in our water and our soil.
Make sure you filter your water.
In fact, Consumer Reports tested food products for phthalates, which is one of these toxic
chemicals, from 67 grocery stores and 18
fast food chains and found that levels vary dramatically. Some of the worst offenders
for having these chemicals were Coca-Cola, Fairlife, Core Power, High Protein Milkshakes,
Slim Fast, Yoplait, Wendy's Crispy Chicken Nuggets, Chipotle, and Moe's Southwest Chicken
Grill, Chicken Burrito, Burger King Whopper, Cheerios,
and the list goes on. Now, I'll put the link to the article in the show notes so you can read it
yourself, but I'm not making this stuff. This is real science. Now, lab testing can really help
you better understand your risk. I recommend everyone get their lab test regularly, and that's
why I co-founded, and I'm the chief medical officer of Function Health. The link is
functionhealth.com slash mark, and you can get access. officer of Function Health. The link is functionhealth.com
slash mark, and you can get access. There's 50,000 people who are members, but 300,000 on the
wait list. You can jump the wait list with that code, functionhealth.com slash mark. Now, why I
created this is to give people access to their own lab data to democratize health. There's over
100 plus biomarkers that are tested for just $4.99 a year, twice a year testing, and you get
comprehensive testing that gives you got comprehensive testing,
they give you an idea of where you're headed with your metabolic health. For example, fasting insulin is tested in less than 1% of all lab tests by your doctor. But that's really important,
as we've just talked about. Cardiometabolic health, which looks at your insulin resistance
through your cholesterol test, your blood sugar, your A1C, remember the glycated hemoglobin,
your white cells, your red cells, your platelets, all important in looking at cancer.
Nutritional status, which plays a big role in cancer, like vitamin D and the omega-3s,
the B vitamins like homocysteine, highly linked to cancer.
Zinc, iron, magnesium, really important.
B12, all these play a role in your immune system.
Looking at inflammation is important, high CRP, because you can see, we're seeing 46%
of the population that we're testing
have a high C-reactive protein. That's terrifying to me that everybody's walking around
inflamed and they don't know it. And as we've talked about, inflammation is a huge driver of
cancer. And we also look for other things that cause cancer, like stress, cortisol levels,
uric acid, it's another important marker looking at your metabolic health. Sex hormones can be
linked to cancer, like estrogen and so forth. Liver enzymes to show how well you're detoxifying. Heavy metals, we can see. We're able to do other
things, even like PFAS chemicals. BPA, we're going to be testing. All these tests, we're going to be
able to show you what's going on in your body. You also may want to look at other tests, like
a microbiome analysis. You might want genetic testing. But we do also something called the
gallery test. And this is something really important to me. The gallery cancer test, we do it function. And we've seen a tremendous amount,
a surprising amount of cancer in a relatively young population. In fact, one of every 188 people
that gets tested with the gallery test has a positive test. And there is less than half a
percent false positives. And it picks up the cancers when they're often missed by regular
treatments. A year
or two or three before regular screening tests will pick them up and they could save your life.
So personally, I think this should be done every year starting probably about 40. I'm certainly
doing it. I've had two cancer deaths. My father and my sister died. So I'm definitely checking
mine. And the sooner you know, the better. There are other tests to do. We do, for example,
looking at toxin load, mitochondria.
I test in Germany, I use called IGL.
But this is really important to know what's going on in your body, to track yourself over time, to get your data and to kind of clean up your life so you can dramatically reduce
your risk.
So as we wrap up today's episode, it's really clear the power of food goes far beyond just
nutrition.
By understanding the root cause of cancer and the
role of chronic inflammation, we can take proactive steps to protect our health, which is really
important. Remember, making informed choices about what we eat and opting for whole nutrient-dense
foods and avoiding all that ultra-processed crap can make a huge difference in reducing our cancer
risk. So I want to thank you for joining me on this journey, on this critical link between diet and cancer prevention.
And I hope today's discussion empowers you
to make healthier choices
and take control of your wellbeing.
Don't forget to check out the show notes
for additional resources and information
and keep tuning in for more insights
into how you can take control of your health
in ways that empower and rejuvenate.
And thanks again for joining me
and see you next Friday for another juicy episode of Health Bites.
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