Is soy ok to eat with a high risk of getting breast cancer?

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elizwal
elizwal Member Posts: 1

What is the latest research with eating soy products? My sister and mother died in their 40s from breast cancer. My sister's cancer was estrogen receptor positive. I am lactose intolerant, it has gotten worse and I want to get back to drinking soy milk. I am a vegetarian too so soy is a great protein for me. I'm In my mid 40s. Thank you for your time.

Comments

  • flash
    flash Member Posts: 1,685
    edited December 2012

    My understanding is that the jury is still out on this one.  There are conflicting studies and the studies that have been done aren't always statistically reliable.  While there is some research that suggests there is a difference between the alpha and beta forms of estrogen in the body it just isn't well enough researched.  the oncs I know suggest avoidance for now with a "let's reconsider later" if some new research comes out.  

    good luck

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited December 2012

    The latest research says that soy is fine. Here is a link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21357380



    My oncologist said it was o.k. and I am also high risk.

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited December 2012

    I was also concerned about this. I am newly diagnosed and having a Mx on Wenesday. I don't eat dairy either, and have been eating all types of soy for many years.

    I have read all I can find on the subject,and it looks like it is ok, but heck who really knows?

    My Mother had BC in 1994 and had never eaten a soy product in her life.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited December 2012

    My onc said it was ok to eat in moderation, but to avoid the concentrated isoflavones and stuff in capsules. It's added to so many things that you couldn't completely avoid it if you tried. I tried almond milk and it was pretty good. I think it's more expensive than soy milk however.

  • amanda1116
    amanda1116 Member Posts: 127
    edited December 2012

    The soy connection is a questionable one.  First of all soy protein and soy products are in so many things and the reason is very, very few people are allergic to soy (unlike milk for example). I will say that the connection between high consumption of red meat and alcohol and breats and other cancers may be many times greater than soy or soy products.  I don't any red meat or alcohol and never have (not for social or spiritual reasons, but simply because I hate the taste of both and always did. Even as a child, I would feel ill at the sight of red meat) That said, I eat fish I am pretty sure that some of what they insist is wild isn't and has more dangerous stuff it than any soy ever could.  I eat soy products in real moderation because of the breast cancer connection, but having spent years around Asian culture and visiting Asia (my daughter is adopted from China), Chinese and Japanese women eat soy sometimes at every meal and have the lowest rates of breast cancer in the developed world.  Only parts of Africa are lower.  What does this imply? I can't say but it is notable.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited December 2012

    From the research I've done and all the things that one takes on board to add into the equation. If at all possible I will avoid it like the plague. It is in just about everything. One of the biggest red flags that NO ONE can  deny is by far the majority of it is genetically engineered. Don't even get me started on EVIL MOnsanto and this "round-up ready" stuff. You have a look at the data sheets concerning ROund-up which is has been touted as being safe for YEARS and it is far more dangerous that what they purport.  Huge topic. Another red flag. Soy is the "darling of the food industry" and it is protected as such. Theres a lot of propaganda, outright lies and confusion out there about soy and it is touted as being safe.  In NZ we had an excellent informative dedicated site to the dangers of soy and it has "disappeared" off the map. It exposed lot about the whole soy industry. Gotta question yourself why sites like this get taken down. Believe what you want but my belief is theyre silenced one way or another.

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited December 2012

    My MO (who is a brilliant researcher and the Chief of Oncology) says that the latest studies have not proven a link between breast cancer and soy products.

    The only thing she said was that she preferred me to drink Lactaid instead  of the large amounts of soy milk I was drinking, but otherwise, there was no point in avoiding moderate amounts of soy/soy protein in anything else.

    I am 100% ER+, and am taking Anastrozole.

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