How stress shapes cancer's course
About two millennia ago, the Greek physicians Hippocrates and Galen suggested that melancholia—depression brought on by an excess of "black bile" in the body—contributed to cancer. Since then, scores of researchers have investigated the association between cancer and the mind, with some going as far as to suggest that some people have a cancer-prone or "Type C" personality.
Most researchers now reject the idea of a cancer-prone personality. But they still haven't settled what influence stress and other psychological factors can have on the onset and progression of cancer, Knowable Magazine notes. More than a hundred epidemiological studies—some involving tens of thousands of people—have linked depression, low socioeconomic status and other sources of psychological stress to an increase in cancer risk, and to a worse prognosis for people who already have the disease. However, this literature is full of contradictions, especially in the first case.
In recent decades, scientists have approached the problem from another angle: experiments in cells and animals. These have revealed important mechanisms by which stress can alter tumors, says Julienne Bower, a health psychologist at UCLA who coauthored a 2023 article on the connection between the brain and the immune system in diseases, including cancer, in the Annual Review of Clinical Psychology. Such studies are showing that "psychological factors can influence aspects of actual tumor biology," she says. On the flip side, studies in people and animals suggest that blocking the chemical signals of stress may improve cancer outcomes.
Today, a growing number of researchers think that psychological factors can influence cancer's progression once someone has the disease. "I don't think anyone appreciated the magnitude by which even mild stress, if it's chronic, can have such a negative influence on cancer growth," says Elizabeth Repasky, a cancer immunologist at the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo, New York.
New interest in the relationship between stress and cancer growth emerged in part from research into how stress affects the body's response to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In the 1990s and early 2000s, genomics researcher Steve Cole and his team at UCLA investigated why people infected with HIV who were under high stress tended to have worse outcomes, including larger viral loads and poorer responses to antiretroviral drugs.
Cole's team discovered several routes through which stress could worsen HIV infections. In monkeys, they found, the lymph nodes of stressed animals had many more connections to sympathetic nerve cell fibers—which execute the body's fight-or-flight response—than the nodes of unstressed monkeys. Lymph nodes contain immune cells, and the nerve fibers reduced the antiviral function of these cells, which, in turn, led to an increase in the replication of a version of HIV that infects monkeys and apes.
Lymph nodes, in addition to housing immune cells, also act as the body's drainage system, flushing away toxins through a network of tissues, organs and nodes called the lymphatic system. Importantly, cancer cells can hijack this system, using it to travel through the body. Erica Sloan, a postdoctoral trainee of Cole who was involved in the HIV work, wondered whether stress, via the sympathetic nervous system, might also affect lymph nodes in those with cancer.
Sloan, now a cancer researcher at Monash University in Australia, went on to discover in mice that chronic stress increases the number of connections between the lymphatic system and breast tumors, making the cancer cells more likely to spread. Strikingly, treatment with a drug—a beta blocker that blunts the activity of key molecules of the sympathetic nervous system such as norepinephrine—prevented these effects.
Research by other groups has shown that stress can lead to molecular changes, particularly within the immune system, that influence how cancer progresses. Some of this work suggests that, when stress leads to inflammation—a broad immune reaction typically brought on by injuries and infections—it can boost the growth of tumors.
Stress can also impair the activity of immune cells that play an active role in fighting cancer. In the early 2000s, research by University of Iowa behavioral scientist Susan Lutgendorf and her colleagues found that in patients with ovarian cancer, depression and anxiety were associated with impaired tumor-fighting immune cells. In another study of people with ovarian cancer, the researchers found that poor social support was linked to higher levels of a growth factor that stimulates blood vessel growth around tumors. This growth, called angiogenesis, enables new blood vessels to supply nutrients to tumors and—like the lymphatic system—provide pathways through which cancer cells can spread to other parts of the body.
Lutgendorf and her colleagues have since found that stressful situations have a similar effect on mice with ovarian cancer, enhancing tumor angiogenesis and cancer spread. Equally important, they've found that these effects can be reversed with beta blockers. Other groups have found similar effects of blocking stress signals on other types of cancer in rodents, including blood and prostate cancer. In addition, researchers have found that increasing levels of stress hormones such as norepinephrine and cortisol in mice can make previously dormant cancer cells more likely to divide and form new tumors.
Studies like these are revealing that stress can trigger a cascade of biochemical changes and alter a cancer cell's environment in a way that may promote its spread. "Stress signaling and stress biology really have an impact on most—if not all—of these processes," says Jennifer Knight, a cancer psychiatrist at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
If stress can make cancer worse, how can the process be stopped? Little by little, new treatments are emerging.
For about half a century, clinicians have used beta blockers to treat hypertension. By scouring data from patient registries, researchers found that people with cancer who already had been taking certain kinds of beta blockers at the time of diagnosis often had better outcomes, including longer survival times, than those who were not on the medicines.
Over the past few years, several clinical trials—most of which are small and early-stage—have directly tested whether beta blockers could benefit people with cancer. In one pair of studies, a research team led by neuroscientist Shamgar Ben-Eliyahu at Tel Aviv University, administered the beta blocker propranolol along with an anti-inflammatory drug to people with colorectal or breast cancer five days before surgery. The team chose this timing because earlier research had shown that while surgery is an opportunity to remove the tumor, it can also paradoxically provide the chance for the cancer to spread. So blocking any potential effects of stress on cancer spread, they reasoned, could be crucial to a patient's long-term prognosis.
These trials, which involved dozens of patients, revealed that the tumor cells of those who received the drugs showed fewer molecular signs of being able to spread—a process known as metastasis—less inflammation, and an increase in some tumor-fighting immune cells. For colorectal cancer patients, there were also hints that the intervention could reduce cancer recurrence: Three years after the procedure, cancer returned in two of the 16 patients who received the drugs, compared to six of 18 patients who didn't receive those meds.
Other studies have assessed the effect of using beta blockers alone, without anti-inflammatory drugs. In 2020, Sloan and her colleagues published a study including 60 breast cancer patients, half of whom were randomly assigned to receive propranolol a week before surgery, while the other half received a placebo. They, too, found that tumor cells from patients who received beta blockers had fewer biomarkers of metastasis.
Stress-reducing beta blockers may also benefit other cancer treatments. In a 2020 study, Knight and her team looked at the effect of beta blockers in 25 patients with multiple myeloma who were receiving blood stem cell transplants. Patients who took beta blockers had fewer infections and faster blood cell recovery—although the study was too small to properly evaluate clinical outcomes. And in a small study of nine people with metastatic skin cancer, Repasky and her colleagues found hints that beta blockers might boost the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy treatments.
While studies on beta blockers are promising, it's not clear that these drugs will improve outcomes in all kinds of cancers, such as lung cancer and certain subtypes of breast cancer. Some patients can react badly to taking the medications—particularly those with asthma or heart conditions such as bradycardia, in which the heart beats unusually slowly.
And, crucially, the drugs only block the endpoint of stress, not its cause, Repasky says. They will therefore likely need to be combined with mindfulness, counseling and other stress-reducing strategies that get closer to the root of the problem.
Such interventions are also in the works. Bower and her team have conducted clinical trials of mind-body interventions such as yoga and mindfulness meditation with breast cancer survivors, to improve health and promote lasting remission. They've found that these therapies can decrease inflammatory activity in circulating immune cells, and they speculate that this may help to reduce tumor recurrence.
Ultimately, bigger clinical trials are needed to firmly establish the benefits of beta blockers and other stress-reducing interventions on cancer survival outcomes—and determine how long such effects might last. The timing of treatment and the type of cancer being treated may play a role in how well such therapies work, researchers say. But lack of funding has been a barrier to conducting the larger follow-up studies needed to answer such questions. The work isn't yet backed by pharmaceutical companies or other organizations that support large studies in oncology, Knight says.
And for now, whether stress can increase a person's risk of developing cancer in the first place, as the ancient Greeks once postulated, remains a mystery. Population studies linking stress to cancer risk are often complicated by other factors, such as smoking, poor nutrition and limited access to health care.
"We have no definitive way of saying, 'If you're stressed out, you're going to develop cancer,'" says Patricia Moreno, a clinical psychologist at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and coauthor of an article in the 2023 Annual Review of Psychology about stress management interventions in cancer.
But for people who already have a cancer diagnosis, many researchers argue that the evidence is strong enough to include stress management in clinical practice. On average, cancer patients do not receive psychological therapies that can reduce stress at the level for which they are needed, says Barbara Andersen, a clinical psychologist at Ohio State University. Although they won't be necessary for every patient, many can benefit from mind-body interventions, she says. "I'm not saying they should be a first priority, but they shouldn't be the last."
This story was produced by Knowable Magazine and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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Let's get started!Make Slow-Cooker Moroccan-Spiced Chicken Stew to have for lunch on Days 2 through 5.1 serving Chickpea & Potato Hash 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup blueberries 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap 1 medium apple 1 serving Superfood Chopped Salad with Salmon & Creamy Garlic Dressing Daily Totals: 1,501 calories, 78g fat, 73g protein, 139g carbohydrate, 30g fiber, 1,531mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to A.M. snack, ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to lunch and 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack. 1 serving Strawberry-Peach Chia Seed Smoothie 1 large hard-boiled egg ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 serving Slow-Cooker Moroccan-Spiced Chicken Stew 1 medium bell pepper, sliced 2 Tbsp. hummus ¾ cup low-fat plain kefir 1 serving Cauliflower Steaks Piccata 1 serving Roasted Broccolini with Lemon & Parmesan ½ cup cooked quinoa 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream Daily Totals: 1,512 calories, 65g fat, 80g protein, 163g carbohydrates, 36g fiber, 1,967mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Increase to 2 large hard-boiled eggs at breakfast, add 1 large pear to A.M. snack and add 1 medium apple with 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack. 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup blueberries 1 serving Slow-Cooker Moroccan-Spiced Chicken Stew 1 medium bell pepper, sliced 2 Tbsp. hummus ½ cup cherries 1 serving Slow-Cooker Marry Me Chicken with Barley 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream Daily Totals: 1,516 calories, 43g fat, 98g protein, 189g carbohydrates, 33g fiber, 1,682mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to A.M. snack, ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack and 1 serving Cabbage Caesar Salad to dinner. 1 serving Strawberry-Peach Chia Seed Smoothie 1 large hard-boiled egg ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 serving Slow-Cooker Moroccan-Spiced Chicken Stew 1 medium bell pepper, sliced 2 Tbsp. hummus 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 medium peach 1 serving Roasted Chickpea Curry Bowl 1 serving Radish, Celery & Cucumber Salad Daily Totals: 1,513 calories, 68g fat, 84g protein, 155g carbohydrates, 36g fiber, 2,232mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana to breakfast, 1 large pear to A.M. snack and 1 medium orange to lunch. 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup blueberries 1 serving Slow-Cooker Moroccan-Spiced Chicken Stew 1 medium bell pepper, sliced 2 Tbsp. hummus 1 large pear 1 serving Creamy Pesto Shrimp with Gnocchi & Peas 1 serving Cucumber, Tomato & Feta Salad Daily Totals: 1,515 calories, 55g fat, 83g protein, 178g carbohydrates, 29g fiber, 1,703mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 cup low-fat plain kefir to breakfast, 1 medium orange to lunch, ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack and 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 serving Strawberry-Peach Chia Seed Smoothie 1 large hard-boiled egg 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup raspberries 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap 1 medium peach 1 serving Lemon-Garlic Dump Dinner with Chicken, Potatoes & Brussels Sprouts 1 serving Greens with Parmesan Vinaigrette Daily Totals: 1,524 calories, 82g fat, 76g protein, 136g carbohydrates, 33g fiber, 1,970mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Increase to 2 large hard-boiled eggs at breakfast, and add 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to A.M. snack, 1 medium apple to lunch and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack. 1 serving Chickpea & Potato Hash 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 medium peach 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap 1 medium apple 1 serving Baked Halibut with Brussels Sprouts & Quinoa Daily Totals: 1,515 calories, 71g fat, 67g protein, 166g carbohydrates, 33g fiber, 1,791mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 medium orange to breakfast, ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to lunch and 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. a double batch of Overnight Oats with Chia Seeds to have for breakfast on Days 9 through 12. Prepare Chicken & Kale Soup to have for lunch on Days 9 through 12.1 serving Tofu Scramble 1 medium orange 1 large pear 1 serving Chickpea Tuna Salad 1 medium apple 1 serving Zucchini Noodles with Avocado Pesto & Shrimp 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream Daily Totals: 1,494 calories, 74g fat, 79g protein, 151g carbohydrates, 36g fiber, 1,506mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack, 1 cup low-fat plain kefir to lunch, and 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack. 1 serving Overnight Oats with Chia Seeds 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup raspberries 1 serving Chicken & Kale Soup 1 apple 1 stalk celery 1 Tbsp. natural peanut butter 1 serving Roasted Chickpea & Cauliflower Pitas with Sun-Dried Tomato Sauce Daily Totals: 1,520 calories, 59g fat, 77g protein, 179g carbohydrates, 40g fiber, 1,702mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack, add 1 serving Traditional Greek Salad to dinner and add 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 serving Overnight Oats with Chia Seeds 1 medium orange 1 serving Chicken & Kale Soup 1 apple 1 medium peach 1 serving Chopped Chicken & Sweet Potato Salad 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream Daily Totals: 1,499 calories, 60g fat, 77 protein, 179g carbohydrates, 39g fiber, 1,181mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 cup low-fat plain kefir to breakfast, ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack and 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt with 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to P.M snack. 1 serving Overnight Oats with Chia Seeds 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup raspberries 1 serving Chicken & Kale Soup 1 apple 1 medium bell pepper, sliced 3 Tbsp. hummus 1 serving Sheet-Pan Gnocchi with Broccoli & White Beans Daily Totals: 1,498 calories, 64g fat, 69g protein, 172g carbohydrate, 39g fiber, 1,771mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack, 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to lunch and 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 serving Overnight Oats with Chia Seeds 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Chicken & Kale Soup 1 apple 1 medium banana 1 serving Greek Salad with Edamame 1-oz. slice whole-wheat baguette Daily Totals: 1,505 calories, 64g fat, 74g protein, 174g carbohydrate, 37g fiber, 1,514mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack and add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds with 1 medium orange as an evening snack. 1 serving Tofu Scramble 1 medium orange 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 medium peach 1 serving Chickpea Tuna Salad 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemony Salmon & Orzo Casserole Meal-Prep Tip: Reserve leftover Anti-Inflammatory Lemony Salmon & Orzo Casserole to have for dinner tomorrow. Daily Totals: 1,498 calories, 70g fat, 103g protein, 125g carbohydrate, 29g fiber, 1,730mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemon-Blueberry Smoothie to breakfast and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted shelled pistachios to lunch. 1 serving Tofu Scramble 1 medium orange 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup raspberries 1 serving Chickpea Tuna Salad ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 plum 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemony Salmon & Orzo Casserole Daily Totals: 1,493 calories, 77g fat, 99g protein, 115g carbohydrate, 33g fiber, 1,660mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemon-Blueberry Smoothie to breakfast and add 1 serving Citrus-Arugula Salad to Vegan White Bean Chili to have for lunch on Days 16 through 19.1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemon-Blueberry Smoothie 1 medium orange 1 serving Chicken, Spinach & Feta Wraps 1 medium peach ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted shelled pistachios 1 serving Massaged Kale Salad with Roasted Sweet Potato & Black Beans Daily Totals: 1,496 calories, 64g fat, 72g protein, 177g carbohydrate, 34g fiber, 1,336mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana to breakfast and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack. 1 serving Bircher Muesli 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Vegan White Bean Chili ½ cup blueberries ¾ cup low-fat plain kefir 1 serving Pan-Seared Chicken Breast 1 serving Chopped Salad with Chickpeas, Olives & Feta Daily Totals: 1,477 calories, 69g fat, 91g protein, 168g carbohydrate, 40g fiber, 1,727mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 clementine to breakfast, add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack and add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 serving Bircher Muesli 1 large pear 1 serving Vegan White Bean Chili 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt 1 medium orange 1 serving Pan-Seared Cod with Radish & Lentil Salad Daily Totals: 1,508 calories, 60g fat, 72g protein, 177g carbohydrate, 38g fiber, 1,365mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 medium orange to breakfast, add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack and add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 serving Bircher Muesli 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Vegan White Bean Chili 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt 1 medium apple 1 serving Lemon-Herb Roasted Chicken 1 serving Cabbage Caesar Salad Daily Totals: 1,489 calories, 69g fat, 84g protein, 146g carbohydrate, 31g fiber, 1,395mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 medium orange to breakfast, 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack and add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 serving Bircher Muesli ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 serving Vegan White Bean Chili 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 plum 1 serving High-Protein Grilled Chicken Salad Daily Totals: 1,513 calories, 75g fat, 85g protein, 137g carbohydrate, 33g fiber, 1,504mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 medium orange to breakfast, 1 peach with 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to the yogurt at lunch and 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemon-Blueberry Smoothie 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Chicken, Spinach & Feta Wraps 1 medium apple 1 large pear 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 serving Tuna Niçoise Salad Daily Totals: 1,523 calories, 57g fat, 89g protein, 178g carbohydrate, 29g fiber, 1,391mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana to breakfast and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds as an evening snack. 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Lemon-Blueberry Smoothie 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Chicken, Spinach & Feta Wraps ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 serving Baghali Pollow with Quinoa (Persian-Style Quinoa & Beans with Chicken) Daily Totals: 1,520 calories, 58g fat, 104g protein, 160g carbohydrate, 29g fiber, 916mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana to breakfast, add 1 medium apple to P.M. snack and add 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening Spinach & Strawberry Meal-Prep Salad to have for lunch on Days 23 through 26.1 serving Feta, Egg & Spinach Breakfast Taco 1 medium orange 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup blackberries 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap 1 large pear 1 serving Skillet Lemon-Garlic Salmon 1 serving Baked Feta & Tomato Portobellos Daily Totals: 1,518 calories, 84g fat, 76g protein, 130g carbohydrate, 31g fiber, 1,397mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 3 Tbsp. chopped walnuts to A.M. snack, 1 cup low-fat plain kefir to lunch and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack. 1 serving Feta, Egg & Spinach Breakfast Taco 1 medium orange 1 large pear 1 cup low-fat plain kefir 1 serving Spinach & Strawberry Meal-Prep Salad 1 cup blackberries ½ cup unsalted low-fat cottage cheese 1 serving Green Veggie Bowl with Chicken & Lemon-Tahini Dressing Daily Totals: 1,497 calories, 60g fat, 100g protein, 149g carbohydrate, 30g fiber, 1,301mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to lunch, 1 serving Citrus-Arugula Salad to dinner and 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 cup low-fat plain stained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup cherries (fresh or thawed from frozen) 2 Tbsp. chopped pecans or nut of your choice 1 Tbsp. chia seeds 1 medium apple 1 serving Spinach & Strawberry Meal-Prep Salad ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds 1 serving Grilled Blackened Shrimp Tacos 1 serving Pineapple & Avocado Salad Daily Totals: 1,507 calories, 82g fat, 85g protein, 124g carbohydrate, 32g fiber, 1,176mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to A.M. snack, 1 medium orange to lunch, 1 medium banana to P.M. snack and 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 cup low-fat plain stained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup cherries (fresh or thawed from frozen) 2 Tbsp. chopped pecans or nut of your choice 1 Tbsp. chia seeds 1 large pear 1 serving Spinach & Strawberry Meal-Prep Salad 1 medium apple 1 Tbsp. natural peanut butter 1 serving Chicken & Bok Choy Soup with Ginger & Mushrooms 1 serving Massaged Kale Salad Daily Totals: 1,505 calories, 76g fat, 89g protein, 127g carbohydrate, 30g fiber, 1,786mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Increase to ¼ cup chopped pecans at breakfast, add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to A.M. snack, increase to 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter at P.M. snack and add 1 serving Lemon-Blueberry Nice Cream as an evening snack. 1 serving Feta, Egg & Spinach Breakfast Taco 1 medium orange 1 medium apple 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter 1 serving Spinach & Strawberry Meal-Prep Salad 1 cup blackberries ½ cup unsalted low-fat cottage cheese 1 serving Baked Mahi-Mahi with Garlic-Herb Butter 1 serving Kale & Shaved Brussels Sprouts Salad with Avocado Caesar Dressing Daily Totals: 1,520 calories, 79g fat, 95g protein, 113g carbohydrate, 31g fiber, 1,649mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to lunch and add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 serving Feta, Egg & Spinach Breakfast Taco 1 medium orange 1 (5.3-oz.) container low-fat plain strained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup blackberries 2 Tbsp. chopped walnuts 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap ½ cup unsalted low-fat cottage cheese ½ cup blueberries 1 serving Massaged Kale Salad with Roasted Squash & Chickpeas Daily Totals: 1,513 calories, 80g fat, 70g protein, 142g carbohydrate, 32g fiber, 1,371mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds and 1 clementine to lunch and add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie as an evening snack. 1 cup low-fat plain stained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup cherries (fresh or thawed from frozen) 2 Tbsp. chopped pecans or nut of your choice 1 Tbsp. chia seeds 1 medium peach ¾ cup low-fat plain kefir 1 serving Anti-Inflammatory Beet & Avocado Wrap 1 medium apple 1 serving Pesto Salmon Daily Totals: 1,511 calories, 81g fat, 81g protein, 129g carbohydrate, 28g fiber, 1,136mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Increase to ¼ cup chopped pecans at breakfast, add ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to lunch and add 2 Tbsp. natural peanut butter to P.M. snack. 1 cup low-fat plain stained (Greek-style) yogurt ½ cup cherries (fresh or thawed from frozen) 2 Tbsp. chopped pecans or nut of your choice 1 Tbsp. chia seeds 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Chickpea Tuna Salad ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted shelled pistachios 1 serving Slow-Cooker Cauliflower & Chickpea Tikka Masala Meal-Prep Tip: Reserve leftover Slow-Cooker Cauliflower & Chickpea Tikka Masala to have for dinner tomorrow. Daily Totals: 1,497 calories, 81g fat, 81g protein, 123g carbohydrate, 29g fiber, 1,035mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Increase to ¼ cup chopped pecans at breakfast, add 1 medium apple to lunch and add 1 serving Sprouted-Grain Toast with Peanut Butter & Banana as an evening snack. 1 serving Chickpea & Potato Hash 1 serving Cottage Cheese Snack Jar with Fruit 1 serving Chickpea Tuna Salad 1 large pear 1 serving Slow-Cooker Cauliflower & Chickpea Tikka Masala Daily Totals: 1,476 calories, 69g fat, 63g protein, 160g carbohydrate, 33g fiber, 1,523mg sodium Make it 2,000 calories: Add 1 serving Raspberry-Kefir Power Smoothie to breakfast, 1 medium orange to lunch and ¼ cup unsalted dry-roasted almonds to P.M. snack. Is it OK to mix and match meals if there is one I do not like? Yes! This meal plan is meant to serve as inspiration. It doesn't need to be followed exactly to reap the benefits. When choosing recipes, we made sure to check the calories, fiber, protein and sodium to align with the parameters of this plan and be within our sodium limits. If you're making a recipe swap, it may be helpful to choose a recipe with similar calories, fiber, protein and sodium levels. For more inspiration, check out these delicious anti-inflammatory and no-sugar recipes. Can I eat the same breakfast or lunch every day? Definitely, it's fine to eat the same breakfast or lunch every day. The breakfasts range from 330 to 400 calories while the lunches span 325 to 475 calories. These ranges are fairly close, though if you're closely monitoring your calories or other nutrients, like protein, you may want to adjust a snack or two. Can I follow this plan if I am not trying to lose weight? Yes! Everyone can benefit from an anti-inflammatory diet, which is ultimately a nutrient-rich eating plan. Chronic inflammation is linked to numerous health issues, so being proactive and aiming to reduce inflammation and up your nutrient intake can be a great step to take. If weight loss isn't your goal, you may need to adjust the total calories. We included modifications for a 2,000-calorie day that may help. Why is there not a modification for 1,200 calories? We no longer provide modifications for 1,200-calorie days in our meal plans. The 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans suggests that limiting calories to 1,200 per day is too low for most people to meet their nutritional needs, plus it's unsustainable for long-term health and well-being. The anti-inflammatory diet is very similar to the popular Mediterranean diet. The anti-inflammatory diet emphasizes eating foods that may reduce inflammation, such as highly pigmented fruits and vegetables like cherries, kale, berries and beets. It also includes plenty of fish, nuts, seeds and other healthy fats. While eating this way 100% of the time is not required to reap anti-inflammatory benefits, the diet does limit added sugars, refined grains and ultra-processed dietitians thoughtfully create EatingWell's meal plans to be easy-to-follow and delicious. Each meal plan meets specific parameters depending on the health condition and/or lifestyle goal it is targeting and is analyzed for accuracy using the nutrition database, ESHA Food Processor. As nutritional needs differ from person to person, we encourage you to use these plans as inspiration and adjust as you see the original article on EATINGWELL