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Anti-Cancer
Foods and Supplements
Source:
LE Magazine February
2003
Cancer
is, perhaps, one of our greatest fears.
Compounding our concern about contracting
the disease is the fear of treatment. Few
medical treatments inflict so much
toxicity, mutilation and pain on the human
body. Once a diagnosis is made, a person's
life will never be the same.
Even
when treatment is successful, a person can
be disfigured from the effects, and parts
of their body destroyed. The chance of a
recurrence is ever present and years after
successful treatment, cancer can come back
even more virulent than before. Even after
enduring conventional therapy, a large
number of cancer patients still succumb
from cancer cells that escaped the initial
treatment.
A
cancer diagnosis humbles a person of any
means. Hospital gowns don't look any
better on rich people than they do on
poor, and chemotherapy feels the same. The
degree of inconvenience, disruption and
destruction of not only the ill person's
life, but of those around them, should
give any person pause to consider what
they can do to avoid it.
The
National Cancer Institute (NCI) issued an
unprecedented number of press releases in
the year 2002 stating that diet has a
major impact on cancer. Deleting things
from one's diet, as well as adding to it
makes all the difference. What follows is
some of the research behind the NCI's
announcements-research that is convincing
mainstream scientists to take another look
at the anti-cancer benefits of compounds
that occur naturally.
What
you choose to eat largely determines
whether or not you will get cancer. In his
book Eat to Beat Cancer, J. Robert
Hatherill points out that Japanese smoke
like crazy (more than Americans), yet have
the world's lowest rate of lung cancer.
They also have the greatest life
expectancy on earth. Clearly, they're
doing something right. While there are
many factors that affect longevity, the
one that researchers are currently
focusing on is diet. We know that diet
plays a big role in cancer. It has been
estimated that bad diet is responsible for
60% of all cancers. A good diet can
prevent 20% to 50% of all cancers,
according to most estimates.
What
is a "good diet?" Research shows
that it's a diet high in plant-based foods
(fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes). A
"bad diet" is one that's mostly
animal-based foods (meat, dairy products)
and synthetic food (prepackaged
"convenience" food). Plants
contain vitamins, minerals and
phytochemicals that block, stop and
suppress cancer. Animal-based food
contains the highest concentration of
cancer-causing chemicals that humans are
exposed to, along with saturated fat and
lots of calories. "Convenience
food" is more product than food-full
of calories, mostly devoid of nutrition.
It's also contaminated with many chemicals
that make it look good on the shelf.
Research
into diet and cancer is getting so
advanced that scientists are beginning to
link what a person eats with the type of
cancer they get. Other researchers are
going the other way: pinpointing specific
things in the diet that prevent cancer
from occurring. For example, researchers
at the University of Utah investigated the
connection between carotenoids and colon
cancer. They found that lutein, but not
other carotenoids, is associated with
lower risk. Similarly, researchers in the
Netherlands found that folate, vitamin C
and beta-cryptoxanthin (but not lutein and
other carotenoids) are protective against
lung cancer. The information from these
kinds of studies is stacking up.
Phytochemicals
(naturally occurring in plants) are the
main defense against all types of cancer.
As an example of how powerful they can be,
it was recently estimated that prostate
cancer in Greece could be reduced by
two-fifths by merely increasing the
consumption of two things: tomatoes and
olive oil. (Dairy products should be
simultaneously decreased, according to the
report.) Another group reports that over
51% of ovarian cancers could be avoided if
women would eat more green vegetables.
This is an amazing figure. It underscores
the tremendous impact diet can have on
cancer.
Phytochemicals
have different actions and different ways
of protecting against cancer. Most are
antioxidant, in other words, they scavenge
damaging free radicals. This action also
protects DNA. Others protect methylation
which is critical for the activation of
cancer-suppressing genes. Still others
enhance immunity or impede the growth of
abnormal cells.
Antioxidants
and cancer
Human
bodies are constantly exposed to
chemicals, radiation and other phenomena
that generate free radicals. Free radicals
rip through cell membranes and slam into
DNA, damaging it. Cancer cells are
essentially normal cells that contain
damaged DNA. Antioxidants stop free
radicals and reduce DNA damage. This is
why they are a major defense against
cancer.
All
antioxidants are not all the same. Some
are better at stopping certain kinds of
free radicals than others. For example,
I3C (indole-3-carbinol) and a supplement
known as "chlorophyllin" (a
semi-synthetic version of chlorophyll)
have excellent effects against free
radicals generated by chemicals called
heterocyclic amines. Heterocyclic amines
are created when food, especially meat, is
cooked over high heat. Studies show that
I3C and chlorophyllin can stop this type
of free radical up to 100%.
They
can also protect against the
highly-carcinogenic mycotoxin known as
"aflatoxin." Aflatoxin is
produced by a fungus that infects grains,
notably corn. In studies on rodents, both
I3C and chlorophyllin inhibit liver cancer
caused by this toxin. A study from a
region of China where the incidence of
liver cancer is very high shows that 100
mg of chlorophyllin three times a day
reduces DNA damage caused by aflatoxin by
55%. The researchers predict that taking
this supplement will push back the onset
of this type of cancer from 20 years to
40.
I3C and chlorophyllin work in another
related way. They keep the liver from
metabolizing carcinogens, including
heterocyclic amines. It is the body's own
metabolism of the chemicals in its effort
to detoxify them that makes them
carcinogenic. I3C apparently works through
one type of enzyme, while chlorophyllin
works through another. A combination of
the two may eliminate more radicals than
either alone.
Some
antioxidants are better at preventing
certain types of cancer than others.
Vitamin C, for example, can inhibit skin
cancer by 25% to 50% when applied directly
to the skin. It does not have the same
effect against breast or prostate cancer.
But lycopene, a flavonoid from tomatoes,
has antioxidant activity against prostate
cancer. Beta-carotene, a carotenoid,
appears to protect against breast cancer,
but not against lung cancer. Having this
type of information about specific
antioxidants can help a person choose one
that may target a certain type of cancer,
or target a specific type of carcinogen.
For those without risk for any particular
type of cancer or exposure to any specific
chemical, it would be prudent to take a
variety of antioxidants in order to block
as many types of free radicals as
possible.
Carotenoids
and cancer
Studies
show that people who eat a lot of red,
orange, green and yellow vegetables have a
significantly decreased risk of various
cancers. The protective effect is due to
carotenoids. Most people are familiar with
the carotenoid beta-carotene, found in
carrots. There are, however, hundreds of
other carotenoids-some not even discovered
yet. There is lutein in spinach,
zeaxanthin in corn and lycopene in
tomatoes. One of the purposes of
carotenoids is to act as sunscreen for the
plants they occur in. It's not surprising
then, that carotenoids provide antioxidant
protection, especially against free
radicals generated by radiation.
Lycopene
is the most abundant carotenoid in humans.
The prostate gland alone contains 14 to 18
different metabolites of lycopene in
people who eat tomatoes or other
vegetables that contain it. Studies show
that men who get the most lycopene in
their diet have the lowest risk of
prostate cancer. The two largest studies
involve 14,000 Seventh-Day Adventists
(lacto-ovo vegetarians) and 47,894
American physicians. In the physician
study, men with the highest level of
lycopene in their blood had a 20%
reduction in risk. In the Adventist study,
eating tomatoes more than five times a
week reduced risk of prostate cancer by
40%. Lycopene is good at protecting
lymphocytes from DNA damage. In an Italian
study, 7 mg/day of lycopene reduced DNA
damage 50% in the first week.
Carotenoids
work synergistically. Taking several
together is better than taking one alone.
In the now infamous study where smokers
took beta-carotene supplements and nothing
else, risk of lung cancer actually rose.
But a 30% reduction was found in a study
of 100,000 people who ate a variety of
carotenoids on a consistent basis rather
than just one. A 60% reduction was found
in the same study for non-smokers. It
appears that alpha-carotene, not
beta-carotene, is the best carotenoid
against lung cancer.
Folic
acid and cancer
This
vitamin has been involved in so many
important cancer studies that it stands in
a class of its own. Folic acid (the
vitamin version of folate) is a B vitamin
typically found in certain green
vegetables and legumes. Meat contains very
little of it. A serving of steak, for
example, contains 3% of the RDA, while a
serving of broccoli contains 50%.
Folate
has powerful cancer preventive effects
through its role in maintaining
methylation. Methylation has two powerful
roles in preventing cancer. First, it is
crucial for the repair of mutations.
Second it is crucial for the activation
and deactivation of genes involved in
cancer. Folate is one of the required
factors for methylation. Without it,
methylation will fail, and cancer will
result. Abnormal methylation is present in
all cancers, no matter the type. The
critical importance of folate, then,
becomes apparent.
Lung
and colon cancer are the first cancers to
be linked to folate deficiency. Breast,
prostate and pancreatic cancer involve the
deficiency as well. Alcoholism, folate
deficiency and breast cancer go together.
The same is true for colon
cancer-alcoholism exacerbates folate
deficiency.
Research into the folate-cancer connection
is just beginning. More information about
folate's cancer preventive effects will
undoubtedly emerge in the next few years.
Flavonoids
and cancer
Quercetin,
ellagic acid, apigenin and luteolin are
powerful anti-carcinogens from plants.
These exotic-sounding phytochemicals
counteract cancer at its earliest stages.
Apigenin, for example, interferes with the
way estrogen is metabolized. When apigenin
is present, estrogen stays in its weak
form, unable to accelerate cancer growth.
Luteolin prevents cancer-promoting
estrogen from getting into cells. Several
of the flavonoids suppress COX-2 (cyclooxygenase),
an enzyme that enables cancer to grow and
spread. COX-2 has been in the news because
it's the enzyme targeted by certain anti-inflammatory
that inhibit cancer and
other degenerative diseases as well.
In
addition to these cancer-blocking actions,
flavonoids possess powerful antioxidant
activity that protects DNA from damage
better than vitamin C.
Some flavonoids come from the family of
aromatic herbs and shurbs known as
labiatae. The labiatae include many of the
herbs traditionally regarded as medicinal
such as rosemary, mint, lavender and
thyme. Labiatae plants provide a
concentrated source of flavonoids with
anti-cancer properties. Scientific studies
are beginning to prove that flavonoids
from these plants have very diverse and
powerful effects against cancer. For
example, in a study on melanoma in mice,
apigenin and quercetin were equivalent to
tamoxifen in inhibiting metastases. In
studies on human leukemia, luteolin and
other flavonoids stopped the growth of
these cells in culture. Flavonoids can
also inhibit enzymes which enable cancer
to invade surrounding tissue and spread to
other parts of the body.
Cancer-fighting
flavonoids are also found in citrus fruit,
tea and other plant-based foods. Certain
flavonoids in citrus fruit known as
polymethoxylated flavonoids work at the
molecular level to counteract cancer.
Tangeretin, for example, restores cell
communication so that cancer can be
brought under the body's control.
Nobiletin, a similar flavonoid, causes
human leukemia cells to differentiate into
normal cells. Dozens of studies have been
done showing that these flavonoids have
powerful and diverse effects against
cancer cells. The net effect is to wipe
out cancer cells as soon as they appear.
Anti-Cancer
Foods and Supplements
Soy
Soybeans
contain several types of cancer-fighting
phytochemicals. Soy isoflavones are
non-steroidal plant compounds that block
hormone-related cancers. These so-called
"phytoestrogens" actually block
estrogen from getting into cells, and
prevent hormone-related cancers including
prostate and breast cancer. In addition to
their hormone-blocking effects, they also
have powerful antioxidant activity.
In
a large study, men who drank soy milk more
than once a day had a 70% reduced rate of
prostate cancer. A similar study on women
shows that a soy-based diet, including 36
oz. of soymilk a day (113 to 207 mg/day of
total isoflavones) reduced levels of
17-estradiol (strong estrogen) by 25%.
Soy
isoflavones may protect against bladder
cancer. In a recent study, genistein
inhibited the growth of eight different
types of human bladder cancer cells.
Daidzein and other isoflavones caused the
cells to self-destruct.
New
research shows that phytoestrogens,
including soy phytoestrogens, shut down
the activation of the estrogen receptor.
This receptor is provoked into sending
"grow" signals when it
encounters chemical estrogens or estradiol
(strong estrogen). In other words, people
with hormone-related cancers have too many
estrogen "doorways" on their
cells. This results in a flood of strong
estrogen into the cell. This type of
estrogen activates proliferation of the
cell. Normal cells have far fewer estrogen
receptors. Normal cells also have an equal
number of a related receptor that
phytoestrogens fit into and activate.
Cancer cells are missing this
phytoestrogen receptor. The phytoestrogen
receptor acts as a counterbalance on the
estrogen receptor, preventing it from
causing growth.
Tea
During
the colonial era, most of North America
was owned by a monopoly called the East
India Company. When the British
government, acting on behalf of the
monopoly, granted it the exclusive right
to sell tea in America, forcing all other
merchants out of business, the colonists
rebelled. The Boston Tea Party was the
opening act of the American Revolution.
It's a testament to the power of tea that
it was instrumental in creating America.
Tea has been used as medicine since at
least the Shang dynasty (1766-1122 B.C.).
Modern
research confirms that tea has health
benefits, notably anti-cancer properties.
Most of this research has been done with
green tea (which is minimally oxidized),
rather than other teas such as black tea.
Tea contains several different
phytochemicals, including
epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), a
polyphenol with proven biochemical actions
against cancer. Tea also contains vitamins
A , C and E, a unique amino acid known as
theanine, carotene, zinc and many other
cancer fighting substances.
One
of the most striking studies on green tea
was done by a group of Japanese
researchers on women who had been treated
for breast cancer. Analysis six years
later of women with stage I or II breast
cancer showed that those who drank five or
more cups of green tea a day slashed their
risk of recurrence almost in half. This is
equivalent to approximately 200 to 400 mg
of EGCG. Furthermore, the researchers
found that the more green tea a woman
drank before she got cancer, the fewer
metastases to lymph nodes she would have
(if she was premenopausal). Women who
engage in the Japanese tea ceremony are
half as likely to die not only from breast
cancer but from any cause, according to
researchers who followed them for eight
years.
Two
new studies show that green tea or EGCG
inhibits certain types of leukemia. When
cells from adults with T-cell leukemia are
treated with green tea polyphenols or
EGCG, the cancer stops multiplying.
Similarly, when various types of leukemia
cells are treated with EGCG, they
self-destruct. According to the study's
authors, "Besides anticarcinogenic
activity, EGCG is expected to have a new
function for leukemia therapy without side
effects" (referring to EGCG's ability
to make existing cancer cells stop
growing).
I3C
Indole-3-carbinol
stands alone as the most well-studied
natural estrogen modulator. Found in
cruciferous vegetables such as cabbage,
cauliflower and broccoli, I3C has proven
effects against hormone-related cancers.
I3C
may be an important tool against
environmentally-caused cancer because it
can block dioxin from entering cells.
Dioxin is a chlorine chemical, known as
the most toxic chemical ever created-so
toxic it is measured in parts per
trillion. The main source of it for most
people is meat and dairy products. Popular
fast foods such as McDonald's Big Macs®
have been found to contain metabolites of
dioxin. Dioxin is suspected as a cause (or
contributing cause) of breast, prostate,
lymphoma and lung cancers.
I3C
comes to the rescue by its ability to
compete with dioxin for entry into cells.
The same receptors, or doorways, that
allow estrogen and dioxin into cells,
allow I3C as well. When I3C and dioxin are
put together with cells, I3C keeps some of
the dioxin out by physically blocking the
harmful chlorine chemical. This same
mechanism also protects cells from strong
estrogen that can promote cancer growth.
A
recent study shows that treatment with I3C
can reverse precancerous conditions of the
cervix in humans. I3C may also protect
smokers. When I3C was given to rats forced
to ingest smoke, DNA damage was reduced
over 50% in lungs and trachea, and 65% in
the bladder. It also inhibits heterocyclic
amines, dangerous carcinogens that form
when meat is cooked. One study showed that
I3C was up to 95% effective in inhibiting
carcinogens. (Note: the recommended dose
for I3C is 400 mg for most women and 600
mg for most men, depending on weight).
Zinc
Zinc
is crucial for immunity. Thirty days of
suboptimal zinc intake causes a 30% to 80%
loss of immune defense. Studies show that
zinc is important for natural killer (NK)
cells to multiply and function. NK cells
are the body's first-line defense against
certain types of cancer. Supplemental zinc
has been shown to increase antibody
response and T-cell counts. Zinc
deficiency causes the thymus to atrophy:
supplements can reverse this.
Think
Prevention
Cancer
is the second
leading cause of
death in
America. The
time to think
about prevention
is now.
Eliminating
chemical
exposure (yard
sprays,
household
cleaners, paint,
plastic, etc.)
as much a
possible reduces
risk. Changing
from a
meat-based diet
to plant-based
food can slash
risk by as much
as 50%. Certain
types of
supplements can
further reduce
risk by
terminating
cancer before it
has a chance to
grow and spread.
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Zinc
status is very much related to infection
and disease. People with lymphoma have
decreased levels of zinc and increased
levels of copper. This trend reverses
during remission. Zinc deficiency is
prevalent in alcoholism, gastrointestinal
disorders and renal disease. Infections
appear to reduce zinc levels. And reduced
zinc levels appear to increase the chances
of getting an infection.
It's
impossible to make a blanket
recommendation about how much zinc a
person should take. Too much zinc is as
bad as too little. Too much zinc depresses
immunity as surely as too little. Very
little research has been done on zinc, and
unfortunately, "There is no
universally accepted single measure
suitable to accurately assess the zinc
status of an individual."* Currently,
30 to 50 mg of elemental zinc per day is
the recommended amount. However, this is
very arbitrary inasmuch as an individual
might need different amounts of zinc at
different times, depending on their
health, age, diet and other factors that
affect zinc utilization, absorption and
acquisition. As an example of how
difficult pinpointing zinc supplementation
can be, a study on healthy men showed that
300 mg/day of elemental zinc suppressed
immunity. Yet, a study in people over age
70 found that 440 mg of zinc a day
significantly increased immunity. One
approach is to look at copper levels
instead. If copper levels are elevated, or
the copper-to-zinc ratio is high, zinc
should be taken until the balance
normalizes, regardless of whether lab
results fall within the "normal"
range.
Anti-inflammatories
Non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) exploded
on the scene in 2000 as possible cancer
preventive agents. The latest research
indicates that NSAIDs, including aspirin,
have multiple and diverse actions against
the growth and mestastasis of cancer
cells. Colon cancer has received the most
attention. Risk can be slashed 50% by the
long-term use of NSAIDs such as ibuprofen.
Esophageal, stomach, rectal and bladder
cancer risk are also significantly
reduced. For breast cancer, 2 to 10 years
of NSAIDs reduces overall risk, and
reduces the risk of metastases everywhere
except nearby lymph nodes.
Aspirin
may also reduce risk, but apparently in a
different way, and not as strongly. When
researchers at the University of Leeds
tested aspirin on colon cancer cell lines,
it stopped the cells from growing but did
not induce apoptosis (cell death). The
same cells treated with the NSAID drug
indomethacin were growth-arrested and
destroyed by apoptosis. Different NSAIDs
work differently against cancer cells, and
it may turn out that some work better for
some types of cancers than others.
Combining aspirin with an NSAID may
enhance the effectiveness.
The
natural anti-inflammatory, curcumin, has
demonstrated similar and powerful effects
against the growth of cancer cells. Some
new concerns have been raised about the
expensive and highly advertised NSAIDs,
Celebrex and Vioxx drugs. According to the
drug reference book Worst Pills, Best
Pills, they may have previously unknown
gastrointestinal and cardiovascular
side-effects. The manufacturers of both
drugs have been warned by the FDA to cease
misrepresenting their safety and
effectiveness.
One
of the interesting properties about
anti-inflammatories is that they may
conserve the body's antioxidants,
particularly the carotenoids. In a study
from the UK, 1200 mg/day of ibuprofen
helped cancer patients recover their
levels of beta-carotene, lutein and
lycopene. This phenomenon can be explained
by the fact that inflammatory reactions
generate free radicals that deplete the
body of such plant-derived antioxidants.
Anything that suppresses inflammation, be
it ibuprofen, fish oil or curcumin,
conserves precious antioxidants in the
body. Chronic inflammation is related to
increased cancer risk, and inflammation
enhances the ability of cancer to spread.
Supplements
versus food
Food
contains all the nutrients the human body
needs. And if we eat the right kind of
food, we'll get them. The problem is we
don't. Some of us, however, are chasing
our hot dogs with vitamins in an effort to
fortify our diets. That's the approach of
the industry that makes food products-they
fortify their products with vitamins. It's
not the greatest approach, but it's not
altogether bad. Vitamins can undo some of
our bad habits. They can't replace good
diet, but they can have a beneficial
effect.
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And
in fact, sometimes a supplement gets the
job done better than a food containing it.
The reason is partly due to
bioavailability. Bioavailability has to do
with the body's ability to utilize a
nutrient. The vitamins in food are
attached to proteins. They must be
separated from those proteins in order to
be utilized. Different factors can
conspire to impede that process. For
example, phytic acid that is found in the
hulls of grains like wheat can interfere
with the body's absorption of zinc and
calcium. Another classic example is the
necessity of a stomach chemical known as
intrinsic factor for vitamin B12
utilization. And then there's the problem
of how various things a person eats
interact. A person who dresses their salad
with non-fat dressing will not be able to
utilize the vitamin K in the leaves of the
lettuce: fat must be present for the
vitamin to be absorbed. Supplements avoid
these problems. Vitamin K supplements, for
example, come ready-made with a drop of
oil for absorption. The bioavailability
problem has been demonstrated in studies
showing that if Indonesian women eat a
beta-carotene-fortified cracker, more
beta-carotene and vitamin A will appear in
their blood than if they eat stir-fried
vegetables containing beta-carotene.
Folate
is another vitamin that seems more
bioavailable as a supplement. Research in
the UK shows that "intake of folic
acid supplements provides a greater
elevation in serum folate levels than
dietary food intake, suggesting that
dietary manipulation is an ineffective
strategy (for pregnant women)." This
agrees with data from the Nurses' Health
Study where folate from food lowered the
risk of colon cancer a little, but
supplemental folate lowered it
significantly.
This
highlights one of the other benefits of
supplements. They are concentrated and you
know how much you're getting (if the
supplement is from a reputable company).
One of the problems with trying to get
enough cancer-fighting nutrients from food
is that the sheer amount of vegetables and
fruit a person has to consume is daunting
if the person wants to get a full spectrum
of protection, not just avoid deficiency
disease. For example, if a person wanted
to cover all the carotenoids every day,
they would need to eat green, yellow,
orange and red vegetables-all of them.
Let's say they also wanted the benefits of
I3C (indole-3-carbinol), a phytochemical
in cruciferous vegetables, they would have
to add cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower or
mustard. If they also wanted to cover the
citrus flavonoid spectrum, they would also
have to eat a wide variety of citrus
fruit-and so on. If a person wants to
ingest a wide variety of anti-cancer
compounds on a daily basis, in a
substantial amount, it's more practical to
take them in a concentrated form. A person
can hold in one hand vitamins found in
bushels of vegetables, pounds of soy and
mountains of fruit. However, supplements
should not replace a good diet. Whole
foods contain important and diverse
factors that maintain health, and everyone
should be eating as much of them as
possible. Supplemental vitamins can,
however, provide an extra measure of
protection. For cancer prevention, this is
especially important.
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Not Use Celecoxib (CELEBREX) and Rofecoxib
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AC, et al. 2000. Folic acid supplements
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