Kerrie tegen uitzaaiingen bij borstkanker.*
Uit
een studie onder muizen is gebleken dat curcumin, de stof die kerrie de gele
kleur geeft, de kans op en het aantal uitzaaiingen bij borstkanker aanzienlijk
doet verminderen. Bij de speciale muizen die geen curcumin in hun dieet kregen
ontwikkelden zich bij 96% uitzaaiingen. Zij die een curcumin dieet kregen was
deze ontwikkeling gereduceerd tot slechts 28% en vormden zich slechts een klein
aantal kankercellen.
Uit
een andere recente studie was reeds vastgesteld dat de werking van curcumin
berust op de onderdrukking van een bepaald enzym waardoor kankercellen doodgaan
en uitzaaiingen voorkomen worden.
Curry
spice appears to shut down a protein active in the spread of breast cancer
Curcumin,
the main ingredient of turmeric and the compound that gives curry its
mustard-yellow color, inhibits metastasis to the lungs of mice with breast
cancer, report researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center.
Though
the study results are early, researchers found that the nontoxic natural
substance not only repelled progression of the disease to the lungs, but also
appeared to reverse the effects of paclitaxel (Taxol), a commonly prescribed
chemotherapy for breast cancer that may trigger spread of the disease with use
over a long period of time.
Because
Taxol is so toxic, it activates a protein that produces an inflammatory response
that induces metastasis. Curcumin suppresses this response, making it impossible
for the cancer to spread. In fact, researchers found that adding curcumin to
Taxol actually enhances its effect. Curcumin breaks down the dose, making the
therapy less toxic and just as powerful while delivering the same level of
efficacy.
"We
are excited about the results of the study and the possible implications for
taking the findings into the clinic in the next several years," says Bharat
Aggarwal, Ph.D., professor of cancer medicine in M. D. Anderson's Department of
Experimental Therapeutics. "At this time, advanced breast cancer is a
difficult foe to fight with few proven treatments available after surgery,
chemotherapy and radiation therapy."
Taxol
is currently used as the front-line chemotherapeutic agent in breast cancers,
but because the drug frequently induces drug resistance after prolonged use, it
is not effective in treating metastatic breast cancer, says Aggarwal.
Researchers
studied 60 mice with breast cancer, which were randomly assigned to one of four
groups: control group, Taxol only, curcumin only and the combination of Taxol
and curcumin. After the tumors grew to 10 mm (about the size of a pea), they
were surgically removed, and the mice were fed a powdered curcumin diet.
Macroscopic
lung metastasis, or metastasis that is visible to the naked eye, was seen in 96
percent of the mice in the control group. Treatment using Taxol alone only
"modestly reduced" the incidence of metastases, while the group using
curcumin alone and curcumin plus Taxol "significantly reduced" both
the incidence and numbers of visible lung metastases.
Microscopic
metastasis, or metastasis that is visible only when using a microscope, was
found in the lungs of 28 percent of mice treated with the combination of
curcumin and Taxol, and there was no macroscopic disease present. The
micrometastases present consisted of only a few cells, suggesting that the
combination inhibited the growth of breast cancer tumor cells that were in the
lung before the tumors were removed.
In
a previous study published in the Aug. 15 issue of the journal Cancer, M. D.
Anderson researchers found that when the nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kB) (a
powerful protein known to promote the inflammatory response necessary to cause
breast cancer to spread) is shut down, cancer strains are unable to grow and
cells are pushed to commit suicide.
The
mechanism in this curcumin study works the same way. Taxol activated the NF-kB
in breast cancer cells, while curcumin stopped this activation by blocking the
protein known as "IKK" that switched on the NF-kB, demonstrating how
curcumin and Taxol work against one another. Taxol produced the inflammatory
response, triggering metastasis, and curcumin suppressed it, causing cell death.
Extracted
from the roots of the curcuma longa plant, curcumin is a member of the ginger
family. While it is not used in conventional medicine, it is widely prescribed
in Indian medicine as a potent remedy for liver disorders, rheumatism, diabetic
wounds, runny nose, cough and sinusitis. Traditional Chinese medicine uses
curcumin as a treatment for diseases associated with abdominal pain, and it is
used in ancient Hindu medicine as a treatment for sprains and swelling.
According to the American Cancer Society, the chance of a woman having invasive breast cancer sometime during her life is one in eight. About 211,240 women in the United States will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in 2005, and approximately 40,410 women will die from the disease this year. (Okt. 2005)