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Anticancer Effects Reported for Ginger, Barbed Skullcap, Green Tea
Oct. 28, 2003 -- You might already have
some of the newest cancer-fighting drugs. But you'll find them in your kitchen,
not in your medicine cabinet.
New studies show anticancer effects in ginger, tea made from a Chinese herb
called barbed skullcap, and the more traditional green tea. The reports were
presented this week's Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research meeting, sponsored
by the American Association for Cancer Research.
GINGER FOR COLON CANCER
Ginger's intense flavor comes from its main ingredient -- a chemical called
[6]-gingerol. And that's not all this chemical does, says Ann Bode, PhD,
assistant director of the Hormel Institute at the University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis-St. Paul. Bode gave a small dose of gingerol to 20 mice three
times a week. The mice -- which lack an immune system -- ate the ginger ingredient
before and after getting injections of human colon tumor cells.
"Mice that received gingerol had a very marked inhibition of human cancer
growth," Bode said at a news conference.
How impressive are the results? Well, it's only mice. But the University
of Minnesota has applied for a patent on the use of [6]-gingerol as an anticancer
agent. It has already licensed the technology to Pediatric Pharmaceuticals
of Iselin, N.J.
Of course, all fresh ginger contains gingerol. How much would you have to
eat to get an anticancer effect? Not much -- but it depends on the freshness
of the ginger and the kind of ginger you get.
"The ginger component we used is a primary component of ginger root," Bode
tells WebMD. "There can be a half gram of it per gram of ginger root, but
this depends on how the ginger is processed and how it is grown. We really
don't know how much ginger root you would have to eat to get the same effect
we saw in mice. However, in the popular literature, people have consumed
2-8 grams twice a day with no toxic effect. I am not saying I recommend that,
but depending on their culture a lot of people eat a lot of ginger."
BARBED SKULLCAP TEA
Barbed skullcap is the Chinese medicinal herb ban zhi lian. Its scientific
name is Scutellaria barbata. Tea made from the herb has been used for a variety
of purposes -- including treatment of liver, lung, and rectal cancer.
Brian Wong, PhD, of Union College in Lincoln, Neb., tried giving it to a
strain of mice bred to develop prostate cancer. Normally, these mice quickly
develop fatal prostate tumors. Those who received barbed skullcap had much
slower tumor growth.
"We hope to find the same benefits against prostate cancer in human models,"
Wong says in a news release.
The herb is brewed into a dark tea. It's very potent, Wong says, and only
a small cupful provides a full dose. However, he warns against drinking lots
of the tea in an effort to prevent cancer.
"I drink it because I know on the molecular level it is blocking
carcinogens," Wong says. "But I don't drink it daily. We need to work out
the liver toxicity of the extract. Too much is not good."
GREEN TEA
Several researchers presented new research into the
anticancer effects of green tea.
Nurulain Zaveri, PhD, of SRI International in Menlo
Park, Calif., reported on the green tea extract known as EGCG (epigallocatechin-3-gallate).
Though this extract is thought to have anticancer properties, it's not easily
absorbed by the body. One would have to drink seven or eight cups of green
tea a day to get an effective dose of EGCG.
Zaveri's team developed a form of EGCG that's more
easily absorbed. In the test tube, it inhibits a breast cancer growth factor.
Iman Hakim, MD, PhD, of the Arizona Cancer Center,
led a study in which
smokers drank four cups a day of green or black tea.
Decaffeinated green
tea -- but not black tea -- cut down on one kind
of DNA damage seen in
smokers.
Jia-Sheng Wang, MD, PhD, of Texas Tech University,
led studies of the
effects of a green tea extract on people at high
risk of liver cancer. Study participants received green tea polyphenols for
three months. At the end of the study, they had lower levels of a chemical
marker for liver cancer risk.
SOURCES: Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research conference, American
Association for Cancer Research, Phoenix, Oct. 26-30, 2003. News release,
AACR. News release, University of Minnesota. News conference, AACR.
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