Gember
pakt kankercellen aan.*
Uit
laboratoriumstudies blijkt dat gember in staat is kankercellen te doden en wel
op twee manieren. Het zet zowel aan tot celdood (apoptose) als tot aanval en
zichzelf opeten (autofagie). Gember staat bekend als ontstekingsremmer en
verzachter bij misselijkheid. Bij de proeven werd normaal gemberpoeder opgelost
en bij eierstokkankercellen gebracht en werd bovenstaande resultaten gevonden.
Deze resultaten waren vergelijkbaar tot zelfs beter als proeven met speciale
cytostatica, die meestal gebruikt worden bij dit type kanker. De resultaten zijn
zo hoopgevend dat zo snel mogelijk verder onderzoek bij dieren zal moeten
gebeuren.
Ginger
Causes Ovarian Cancer Cells To Die, U-M Researchers Find
Ginger
is known to ease nausea and control inflammation. But researchers at the
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center are investigating a new use
for this age-old remedy: treating ovarian cancer.
In laboratory studies, researchers found ginger caused ovarian cancer cells to
die. Further, the way in which the cells died suggests ginger may avoid the
problem common in ovarian cancer of cells becoming resistant to standard
treatments.
The researchers are presenting their results in a poster session at the American
Association for Cancer Research annual meeting.
Researchers used ginger powder, similar to what is sold at grocery stores, only
a standardized research grade. The ginger powder was dissolved in solution and
applied to ovarian cancer cell cultures. Ginger induced cell death in all the
ovarian cancer cell lines tested.
Moreover, the researchers found that ginger caused two types of cell death. One
type, known as apoptosis, results from cancer cells essentially committing
suicide. The other type of cell death, called autophagy, results from cells
digesting or attacking themselves.
"Most ovarian cancer patients develop recurrent disease that eventually
becomes resistant to standard chemotherapy - which is associated with resistance
to apoptosis. If ginger can cause autophagic cell death in addition to apoptosis,
it may circumvent resistance to conventional chemotherapy," says study
author J. Rebecca Liu, M.D., assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at
the U-M Medical School and a member of the U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Study results are very preliminary, and researchers plan to test whether they
can obtain similar results in animal studies. The appeal of ginger as a
potential treatment for ovarian cancer is that it would have virtually no side
effects and would be easy to administer as a capsule.
Ginger is effective at controlling inflammation, and inflammation contributes to
the development of ovarian cancer cells. By halting the inflammatory reaction,
the researchers suspect, ginger also stops cancer cells from growing.
"In multiple ovarian cancer cell lines, we found that ginger induced cell
death at a similar or better rate than the platinum-based chemotherapy drugs
typically used to treat ovarian cancer," says Jennifer Rhode, M.D., a
gynecologic oncology fellow at the U-M Medical School.
Liu's lab is also looking at the effects on ovarian cancer of resveratrol, a
substance found in red wine, and curcumin, the active ingredient in the curry
spice turmeric. In addition, researchers at the U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center
are investigating ginger to control nausea from chemotherapy and ginger to
prevent colon cancer.
"Patients are using natural products either in place of or in conjunction
with chemotherapy, and we don't know if they work or how they work. We don't
know how these products interact with chemotherapy or other cancer treatments.
There's no good clinical data," Liu says.
###
More than 20,000 women are expected to be diagnosed with ovarian cancer this
year, and 15,000 will die from the disease, according to the American Cancer
Society. For information about ovarian cancer, go to http://www.cancer.med.umich.edu/learn/ovarianinfo.htm
or call the U-M Cancer AnswerLine at 800-865-1125.
In addition to Rhode and Liu, study authors are undergraduate student Jennifer
Huang, research associates Sarah Fogoros and Lijun Tan, and Suzanna Zick, N.D.,
M.P.H., research investigator in family medicine.
Funding for the study was from the National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
Reference: American Association for Cancer Research 97th annual meeting, April,
2006, Washington, D.C.
Contact: Nicole Fawcett
nfawcett@umich.edu
University
of Michigan Health System
(april 2006)