Patient's Query
Hello doctor,
My wife is 42 years old and was diagnosed with early-stage endometrial cancer three weeks ago and has become completely obsessed with researching every possible dietary change that could support her ongoing medical treatment.
She spends hours every night reading about anti-inflammatory foods and keeps coming back to the same question:
Can a salmon and walnut-rich diet slow endometrial cancer in a 42-year-old woman who is currently undergoing active hormonal and surgical treatment?
Are there any specific foods she should strictly avoid alongside these additions to her daily diet?
She is absolutely determined to do everything nutritionally possible to support her recovery, and we just need honest medical guidance on what genuinely helps versus what is simply false hope being aggressively marketed to vulnerable cancer patients online.
Please help.
Thank you.
Hello,
Welcome to icliniq.com.
I have gone through your query and understand your concern.
I am really sorry you and your wife are going through this, and it is very understandable that she wants to feel some control by focusing on nutrition during such a difficult time.
The honest medical answer is that no specific food, including salmon or walnuts, has been proven to slow or treat endometrial cancer, especially when someone is already undergoing appropriate hormonal or surgical treatment.
That said, foods like salmon and walnuts can still be part of a supportive diet because they contain omega-3 fatty acids, which are linked to reduced inflammation and overall cardiovascular and metabolic health, but their effect is general and supportive rather than cancer-specific.
What matters most is maintaining a balanced, nutrient-rich diet that helps her body tolerate treatment, recover well, and maintain strength, rather than trying to target the cancer directly through food.
There is also a lot of misleading information online that promotes so-called anti-cancer diets or superfoods, and unfortunately, these claims are often not backed by strong clinical evidence.
Instead of focusing on a few special foods, it is more helpful to emphasize overall dietary patterns such as plenty of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, lean proteins, and healthy fats while limiting processed meats, excessive sugar, and highly processed foods.
Maintaining a healthy weight is particularly important in endometrial cancer, as excess body fat can influence hormone levels.
Alcohol should be minimized or avoided, and any extreme or restrictive diet should be approached with caution because it can interfere with recovery or treatment tolerance.
If possible, speaking with an oncology dietitian can provide personalized, evidence-based guidance that aligns with her treatment plan and gives her something constructive to focus on without falling into the trap of false promises.
I hope I have answered your question.
Let me know if I can assist you further.
Thank you.
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Answered byDr. Ashraf Ghani
Medically reviewed byiCliniq medical review team
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