Olijfolie
tegen borstkanker?*
Uit
laboratoriumstudies blijkt dat olijfolie goed is tegen borstkanker. Het oliezuur
in de olijfolie is hiervoor verantwoordelijk en doet dit door de meest
belangrijke genen, die betrokken zijn bij het ontstaan van borstkanker, te
onderdukken. Ook bij de behandeling van borstkanker is olijfolie veel belovend.
Dit onderzoek is echter alleen gedaan in het laboratorium en verder onderzoek in
dieren en mensen zal moeten uitwijzen of dit in de praktijk ook zo is.
Olive Oil May Protect Against Breast Cancer
-- For years,
scientists have thought that olive oil might help prevent breast cancer.
Now they may have
discovered why.
In laboratory
experiments, oleic acid, the main monounsaturated fatty acid in olive oil,
suppressed one of the most important genes involved in breast cancer.
"This is the
first molecular support for the Mediterranean diet," said study author
Javier Menendez, a research scientist with the Evanston Northwestern Healthcare
Research Institute in Illinois. The report appears in the Jan. issue of the Annals
of Oncology.
Others, however,
urged caution in interpreting the findings.
"It's an
interesting story, but it's all done in cell cultures and that's not necessarily
how it will interact in the body," said Dr. Jay Brooks, chief of
hematology/oncology at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans.
"It certainly
is very promising, but there is a very long way to go between doing this in an
animal or human context versus doing it on cells in a test tube," added Dr.
Marleen Meyers, a medical oncologist with the New York University Cancer
Institute.
Epidemiological
studies have reported lower rates of breast cancer in people from the
Mediterranean region, where a lot of olive oil is produced and consumed. This
has led to speculation that the diet, including olive oil, may be responsible.
No one knows,
however, if the protective effect can be found in olive oil, or in another
ingredient besides oleic acid in olive oil, or in another food or if it has
nothing whatsoever to do with diet and instead can be attributed to genetics.
For this study,
Menendez and his colleagues examined human breast cancer cells that had been
grown for this research.
Specifically, they
were looking at the effect of oleic acid on the Her-2/neu gene. The Her-2 gene
is overexpressed in more than one-fifth of people with breast cancer and also
tends to signal the presence of a particularly "bad" cancer.
"Higher Her-2
levels generally mean the cancer is more aggressive and tends to respond less
well to certain kinds of chemotherapy," Meyers said. "It is
prognostically unfavorable."
In the cells, oleic
acid cut levels of the gene Her-2/neu by up to 46 percent.
In addition, oleic
acid seemed to enhance the effectiveness of the drug Herceptin, which targets
the Her-2/neu gene, and increased the expression of a protein that works to
suppress tumors.
Menendez and his
colleagues are now seeking funds to confirm the findings in animal studies.
For Menendez, the
news is already good. "I'm really happy. I'm from Spain. I eat a lot of
olive oil," he said. Spain is the world's biggest producer of olive oil.
"Olive oil is
not toxic at all. It's a very safe habit for people," he added.
For others, though,
any move to consume more olive oil needs more research behind it.
"Things that
we take into our body can have profound effects," Brooks said. "Before
you start adding things to your diet, be very careful because we don't know what
the effects will be."
"If it does
turn out to be an effect, it's an easy step in terms of recommending to people,
but caveats have to be taken," Meyers added. "While olive oil is a
healthy oil, in people who have high cholesterol or triglycerides
or weight problems, it's still an issue." (Febr. 2005)