RESCUEIntervención dietética específica para bomberos para la reducción del riesgo de cáncer
Este estudio tiene como objetivo prevenir el cáncer evaluando qué tan efectivo puede ser un programa de educación nutricional, llamado RESCATE, para mejorar sus hábitos alimenticios, enfocándose específicamente en aumentar su consumo de alimentos protectores como frutas, verduras, granos enteros y pescado durante un período de 12 meses.
RESCUE Nutrition Education Programme
Procesos Patológicos+1
+ Condiciones Patológicas, Signos y Síntomas
+ Inflamación
Estudio de Prevención
Resumen
Fecha de inicio: 5 de mayo de 2026
Fecha en la que se inscribió al primer participante.Firefighters are exposed to a complex mixture of hazardous and carcinogenic substances through their work, including combustion products, diesel exhaust and contaminated fire effluent. Epidemiological evidence shows elevated risks for several cancers, and in 2022 the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified occupational exposure in firefighting as carcinogenic (Group 1). Risk is shaped not only by future exposure but by cumulative exposure over time, because some fire-related contaminants are persistent or bioaccumulative. Firefighters are also commonly exposed to shift work and circadian disruption, which has itself been associated with increased cancer risk. While improvements in personal protective equipment, decontamination practices, and operational procedures remain essential, evidence from exposure studies and biomonitoring research indicates that these measures alone cannot fully eliminate exposure-related risk, particularly for persistent and bioaccumulative contaminants. There is therefore growing interest in additional, practical strategies that can support long-term health resilience in firefighters. Diet is one such area, with evidence linking dietary patterns to cancer-relevant processes such as inflammation, oxidative stress, xenobiotic metabolism, and DNA damage and repair; this evidence base is reflected in the guidance of major international cancer and public health organisations including the World Cancer Research Fund, World Health Organization, and International Agency for Research on Cancer. Within the fire and rescue service, structured nutrition initiatives have historically been rare. Where dietary guidance exists, it usually mirrors general public health advice (healthy eating, weight and fitness) rather than firefighter-specific risks. This can limit engagement for those who already feel fit and for those uninspired by generic advice. In the context of dietary change for firefighter cancer-risk reduction, the limiting factor is often not lack of motivation, but the absence of education and a clear occupational rationale that connects everyday food choices to the specific risks of firefighting. Even if services are well informed regarding suitable dietary intake, dietary behaviours cannot be mandated or enforced within the workplace, and so suitable food choices relies on firefighters themselves. This project addresses that gap by adopting a novel approach: explicitly framing dietary change around occupational cancer risk, aligned with the 2022 IARC classification. This approach is relevant to all firefighters, regardless of demographic factors, such as body composition or fitness level, and provides a clear basis for engagement. At present, there is little published data describing dietary patterns among UK firefighters, limiting the ability of services to design targeted, evidence-informed interventions. The intervention is designed to be practical, culturally appropriate and scalable within real fire service settings. It centres on structured, firefighter-specific education delivered at watch level and reinforced with resources that translate evidence into actionable guidance within existing station "mess" culture. The approach does not rely on individual prescriptions or supplements. The approach is informed by recent peer-reviewed work synthesising evidence on diet, firefighting exposures and cancer risk, co-authored by the principal investigator in collaboration with Dr Shelly Coe (Oxford Brookes University), which highlighted consistent evidence linking dietary patterns to cancer risk, supported by plausible underlying biological mechanisms, alongside the absence of practical firefighter-specific dietary frameworks. This project builds on that foundation by moving from evidence synthesis to real-world implementation and evaluation. The project aligns with the objects of the Fire Service Research and Training Trust by supporting research into the prevention of fire and rescue service-related health risks and by contributing to the training of fire and rescue personnel through structured education and transferable resources. By focusing on practical, scalable dietary change, the project also addresses well-recognised determinants of workforce health and operational resilience, supporting a more stable and effective fire and rescue service while maintaining its primary focus on occupational cancer risk.
Protocolo
Esta sección proporciona detalles del plan del estudio, incluyendo cómo está diseñado y qué se está evaluando.Se reclutarán 350 pacientes
Número total de participantes que el ensayo clínico espera reclutar.Estudio de Prevención
Elegibilidad
Los investigadores buscan pacientes que cumplan ciertos criterios, conocidos como criterios de elegibilidad: estado general de salud o tratamientos previos.Cualquier sexo
Sexo biológico de los participantes elegibles para inscribirse.A partir de 18 años
Rango de edades de los participantes que pueden unirse al estudio.Voluntarios sanos permitidos
Indica si personas sanas, sin la condición que se estudia, pueden participar.Condiciones
Patología
Criterios
Plan de Estudio
Conoce todos los tratamientos administrados en este estudio, su descripción detallada y en qué consisten.Un solo grupo de intervención está designado en este estudio
0% de probabilidad de ser asignado al grupo placebo
Grupos de Tratamiento
Grupo I
ExperimentalObjetivos del Estudio
Objetivos Primarios
Objetivos Secundarios
Centros del Estudio
Estos son los hospitales, clínicas o centros de investigación donde se lleva a cabo el estudio. Puedes encontrar la ubicación más cercana a ti y su estado de reclutamiento.Este estudio tiene 2 ubicaciones
Avon Fire and Rescue Service
Bristol, United KingdomAbrir Avon Fire and Rescue Service en Google MapsAvon Fire and Rescue Service
Bristol, United Kingdom