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It’s common for people to count their calories, log their protein intake and monitor their salt and sugar consumption. But amid all this food tracking, many Americans are forgetting about a key nutrient linked to lower cancer risk, weight loss, better cholesterol and a more robust immune system.
We’re talking about fiber, and research shows that most people in the U.S. aren’t eating enough of it. One study published in 2021 found that only about 7 percent of Americans meet the recommended fiber intake of 14 grams per 1,000 calories of food, or 28 grams for a 2,000-calorie daily diet. A previous study concluded that only 5 percent of Americans consume enough fiber.
“I don’t think fiber is necessarily on people’s radar,” says Katherine Zeratsky, a registered dietitian nutritionist at Mayo Clinic. “And I don’t think fiber gets a whole lot of press.”
One reason: We’re just beginning to discover its benefits throughout the body — beyond keeping it regular, which is the role most people typically associate with fiber. “We’re so early in the science of it,” Zeratsky says. “It’s just a really exciting area.”
Here are five reasons you should add more fiber into your diet this year, based on the latest health research.
The different types of fiber
There are two main types of fiber:
- Soluble: Found in oats, peas, beans, bananas, apples, carrots and citrus fruits. This type of fiber dissolves in water and forms a gel-like material in the stomach to slow digestion.
- Insoluble: Found in whole-wheat flour, beans, potatoes and vegetables such as cauliflower. This type of fiber doesn’t dissolve in water; it helps keep things moving through the digestive tract and adds bulk to the stool.
Source: Mayo Clinic
1. Fiber can lower your cancer risk
A high-fiber diet has been linked to a lower risk of several types of cancer — from breast to pancreatic — and the reasons run the gamut. Researchers point to fiber’s ability to help the body maintain a healthy weight, and obesity is linked to 13 different cancers. Fiber can also help control blood sugar, and high blood sugar is a risk factor for some cancers.
Some researchers point to fiber-deficient diets as one explanation for the recent rise in colorectal cancer cases in young adults. Fiber helps to dilute stool and move it through the intestine quickly, reducing the time that cancer-causing chemicals and ingredients from food are exposed to the intestinal lining, explains Urvi A. Shah, M.D., a hematologist-oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Another plus: Microbes living in the gut can ferment fiber into compounds with tumor-suppressive effects, a study in JAMA Oncology explains.
Scientists are studying how fiber can help combat certain blood cancers. Recent research presented by Shah at the 2024 American Society of Hematology annual meeting followed 20 patients with an elevated BMI and a precancerous blood disorder that put them at risk for developing multiple myeloma, a type of cancer that forms in the white blood cells. After incorporating more fiber in their diets, none of the participants progressed to multiple myeloma after one year, the researchers found. Two participants with progressing disease prior to the study showed a significant slowing of their disease progression.
“I don’t think it’s just limited to myeloma,” Shah says. “We’ve shown it for this cancer, but I think these findings are important for probably many cancers.”
Eating a fiber-rich diet may also improve your outcomes if you already have cancer. A study by researchers at MD Anderson Cancer Center and published in Science found that patients with melanoma who ate more fiber-rich foods when they started immunotherapy survived longer than those who didn’t eat much fiber. In fact, every 5-gram increase of daily fiber was associated with a 30 percent lower risk of cancer growth or death.
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