A team of experts from Harvard University has analyzed 47,911 coffee-loving men and observed that subjects who have a desire to sip six or more cups of coffee per day are least likely to suffer from prostate cancer.
Finding the proper balance in calcium intake, particularly for black men, could be pivotal in reducing the risk of prostate cancer, a Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center study found.
A recent study from Thomas Jefferson Hospital’s Kimmel Cancer Center found antioxidants may be a powerful new weapon in the fight against mesothelioma.
Men who consume the recommended amount of vitamin D are somewhat less likely to suffer a heart attack or stroke than those who get little of the vitamin in their diets.
Researchers have found that omega-3 fatty acids could safely bolster tamoxifen therapy for women suffering from breast cancer. Omega-3s seemed to have a beneficial effect at the genetic level, making tumors more susceptible to the medication.
Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have identified components in pomegranate juice that both inhibit the movement of cancer cells and weaken their attraction to a chemical signal that promotes the metastasis of prostate cancer to the bone.