Tumeric--yes or no

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snoopygirl
snoopygirl Member Posts: 15

At my last checkup my doctor told me to stop taking turmeric as it raises my risk breast cancer risk? Thanks for any advice/info you can provide!

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  • ThreeTree
    ThreeTree Member Posts: 709
    edited September 2021

    Sorry to see no one has weighed in, so here's my 2 cents: To my knowledge, turmeric goes after and kills cancer cells, but there is an absorption problem and it doesn't stay and work in our bodies for very long. More recently, I saw on the Food For Breast Cancer site that turmeric is thought to be estrogenic, so the author of that site was recommending that those with ER/PR+ not use it. My understanding though, is that a lot of estrogenic stuff is OK. The estrogenic substances seem to work for both good and bad, depending. There are different estrogen receptors in our bodies and depending on which one gets activated by the substance, it can do either good or harm. Soy and flaxseed are two other estrogenic substances that there is controversy about. Lately though, most are saying that they are both OK, even beneficial, because they have the good estrogenic effect in reasonable amounts, including the Food For Breast Cancer site that is now saying turmeric might be iffy. I continue to take my turmeric and I realize I might be taking a chance, but it also really helps my aches and pains from Letrozole, so I'm going with it being OK. Many sites on the web say it is good for cancer, so I just don't know. If turmeric is raising my estrogen levels, I'd never know it from all the low estrogen side effects I get from Letrozole. If the turmeric is doing anything bad, the Letrozole must be cancelling it out.

    I am no expert and no medical or science person, this is all just my opinion and take from what I have read over the last 3 years. If nothing else, I hope it gives you some more food for thought.

  • MountainMia
    MountainMia Member Posts: 1,307
    edited September 2021

    I'm not a dietician or food scientist so am not answering with authority. What I understand is that one of the main benefits of turmeric is that it is an anti-inflammatory. https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/mayo...:~:text=Turmeric's%20main%20active%20component%20%E2%80%94%20curcumin,movement%20in%20people%20with%20osteoarthritis.

    and as that, is good for us, generally. Less inflammation, less reaction, etc...

    However, it is also a blood thinner, so people who use blood thinners (including aspirin) should at least check with their doctor before using. I use baby aspirin, so I quit taking turmeric.


  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited September 2021

    Hi Snoopygirl, for hormone positive breast cancer, my oncologist told me turmeric supplements are a no as they increase your estrogen . Adding tumeric to food , salad dressing etc is fine, just the supplements are a no. I took them for a bit as a preventative for inflammation. I started seeing a new oncologist when I had a recurrence in 2019 and this new oncologist told me to stop the tumeric supplements.

  • LillyIsHere
    LillyIsHere Member Posts: 830
    edited September 2021

    After my diagnose 2 years ago, I read about turmeric and I start using it. Not as a supplement but I bought the organic spice and start making a tea (with cinnamon and black pepper) or adding it to the food. Well, I realized I was developing few symptoms, the first time while I was also using fish oil and baby aspirin, it all blow up on having bruises all over from thinning the blood below normal. I stopped. In few months later, I started again with food, and I realized that it does increase letrozole SE. Three days ago, I had some turmeric tea with a friend and since that day, I am having hot flashes that is unusual for me. Unfortunately, turmeric doesn't work well with letrozole in my case. We have to watch out for these supplements with our medications since there is not enough research on the interactions.

  • belle_vie
    belle_vie Member Posts: 4
    edited October 2021

    I both take a turmeric supplement and ingest 1/4 tsp. of tumeric everyday based on Dr. Greger's Daily Dozen. He seems to be under the impression that it is one of the most potent chemopreventive substances there is. Dr. Kristi Funk also recommends it and includes it in her antioxidant breast health smoothie.

  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited October 2021

    I take a mega-dose of it since my MGUS dx. Curcumin is similar to soy in that even if it has estrogenic properties, the "keys" that it binds to limit how much estrogen is available to our bodies (a good thing). I still think cancer is a crap shoot but curcumin has so many positives, I'm hopeful I'm doing the right thing.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited October 2021

    Like April mentioned, to too was told that it’s fine in food but not to take supplements. Both my MO and nutritionists at my cancer center advise trying to get the complimentary stuff through food.

  • Elderberry
    Elderberry Member Posts: 993
    edited October 2021

    You need to be careful with tumeric supplements if you take blood thinners like apixaban. Just go for a good curry.

  • Faith1111
    Faith1111 Member Posts: 46
    edited October 2021

    sad to see all the people saying turmeric is bad for BC. I’ve been taking it ever since my diagnosis in 2019 thinking it kills breast cancer cells. I had read that somewhere anyway. My oncologist said it was okay to take but maybe she doesn’t know? She also said soy was probably okay, but I avoid that. My cancerestrogen positive.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited October 2021

    Faith, not bad really, just not recommended in supplement form. I think some soy is fine to eat too but it has issues to. I read some studies years ago that soy is beneficial but only in Asian populations who regularly consume it but in western groups who added it to their diet, consuming too much lead to problems. It was so long ago that I read that though, sorry I don’t recall specifics.

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