Ross Prentice
![Ross Prentice](/assets/img/authors/unknown.jpg)
Ross Prentice
among begin bottom broad cancer changing data diet initiate line reduce relatively strong time view women
The bottom line is that changing to a low-fat diet may reduce breast cancer risk, especially among women who have a relatively high-fat diet to begin with, but we don't view our data as strong enough at this time to make a broad recommendation that all women initiate a low-fat diet for that purpose.
adopting currently diet encouraged following high might physicians risk talk whether women
I think women who are currently following a low-fat diet should be encouraged to do so. We didn't see any unfavorable effects. For women who are at high risk for breast cancer, they should talk it over with their physicians whether adopting a low-fat diet might be warranted.
achieved believe higher results
If we had achieved an even higher adherence rate, I believe the study's results would have been more dramatic.
diet eating reason women
Women that are already eating a low-fat diet have every reason to continue.