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This randomized controlled trial tests the hypothesis that a reduction in intake of dietary fat will reduce the incidence of breast cancer. Women with more than 50% of the breast occupied by dense tissue on a mammogram have been recruited and allocated by a random (ie chance) process, to an intervention or control group. The intervention group has been taught how to reduce their fat intake to a target of 15% of total calories, while the control group continued their usual consumption of fat. Both groups have then been followed for at least 7 years and the number who develop breast cancer in each group will be compared
Full description
The long term goal of this trial is to determine if intervention in subjects with extensive mammographic densities (a risk factor for breast cancer) with a low fat-high carbohydrate diet will reduce the incidence of breast cancer by 37%. We propose to meet this goal by carrying out a randomized multi-centre trial of dietary intervention in subjects at increased risk of breast cancer that is now in progress.
The method used is to recruit subjects with extensive mammographic densities and enrol them in a randomized trial in which they receive one of two kinds of dietary counselling. A control group receives general advice about nutrition but is not counselled to change their intake of dietary fat or carbohydrate, and an intervention group is given intensive counselling to reduce their intake of total fat to a target of 15% of calories and increase intake of carbohydrate to maintain intake of total calories.
Recruitment to this trial has been in progress in Toronto, Hamilton, London and Windsor since 1991, and in Vancouver since 1994, and all of the 4,615 subjects required for the trial were recruited by November 1998.
The trial is explanatory in that it seeks to determine if there is a biological effect of dietary fat reduction in terms of a reduction in breast cancer incidence. To meet this goal we will select as participants highly motivated subjects who are at increased risk of breast cancer, provide them with a high level of assistance in making a dietary alteration, follow them carefully to ensure the correct identification of subjects who develop breast cancer, and analyse the results both according to intention to treat and dietary compliance. This trial does not attempt to assess directly the possible effects of dietary counselling on the health of the general public.
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