Foliumzuur tegen kanker*
Uit een kleine studie blijkt dat Foliumzuur effectief kan zijn in het tegen gaan en bestrijden van kanker. In de studie kregen 43 patiënten met leukoplakie, een voorstadium van mond- en keelkanker 6 maanden lang iedere 3x 5 mg foliumzuur. Maandelijks werden de patiënten gecontroleerd en duidelijk waren hogere bloedwaarden foliumzuur en lagere waarden homocysteïne. Voldoende foliumzuur in het lichaam is zeer belangrijk omdat daardoor vele reacties in het lichaam, waaronder DNA reparatie en omzetting van (het slechte) homocysteïne in methionine plaatsvinden. In verse groenten en fruit wordt de meeste natuurlijke foliumzuur gevonden. Na zes maanden bleek dat 28% van de patiënten geen leukopakia meer had, 44% had een reductie van 50% of meer. Bij de resterende 28% werd geen verschil geconstateerd. Bij geen van de patiënten werden enige bijwerkingen geconstateerd.
Encouraging
Results For Folic Acid As A Cancer Prevention Drug
Folic
acid supplements may prevent cancer progression and promote regression of
disease, according to a new study. Published in the July 15, 2006 issue of
CANCER), a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the small study
found that 31 of 43 patients with the precancerous laryngeal lesion called
leucoplakia demonstrated 50 percent or greater reduction in the lesion size
after six months of taking folate supplements. In 12 of 31 responders, there was
no evidence of the original lesion. Folate levels in the patients' blood also
increased significantly from baseline while homocysteine levels decreased
significantly. This study provides data to support the hypothesis that folate
insufficiency is a risk factor for cancer progression.
Folate deficiency is the most common vitamin deficiency in the United States.
Folate is a naturally occurring B vitamin (B-9) found abundantly in fresh
vegetables and fruits. Folic acid is its more stable synthetic form found in
dietary supplements and fortified foods. At the biochemical level, folate is
incorporated into coenzymes that are essential in facilitating a variety of
reactions in nucleic acid and amino acids metabolism. Some of which are critical
to healthy life, such as DNA synthesis, DNA repair, and converting homocysteine
to methionine. The latter is particularly important because excess homocysteine
is linked to chronic health problems, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Animal and human studies have increasingly demonstrated associations between
folate deficiency, serum homocysteine elevations, and a variety of cancers. Some
studies have suggested folate supplementation or at least a high folate dietary
intake may protect against some cancers. This body of evidence suggests folate
to be an effective chemopreventive drug. Other chemopreventive drugs are being
tested, and while the retinoids demonstrate the most promise, they are highly
toxic. Giovanni Almadori, M.D. of the Institute of Otolaryngology, Università
Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Policlinico A. Gemelli in Rome, Italy and colleagues
investigated the efficacy of folic acid dietary supplementation to treat
precancerous lesion and prevent cancer.
The investigators enrolled 43 patients with untreated laryngeal leucoplakia and
treated them with folic acid (5mg three times a day) and evaluated the
progression of leucoplakia every 30 days for six months.
Over six months of treatment, 12 patients (28 percent) had complete resolution
of their leucoplakia lesions; 19 patients (44 percent) had reduction of 50
percent or more in the size of their lesions and 12 patients (28 percent) had no
response. Mean folate levels increased and mean homocysteine levels decreased
significantly. There were no moderate or severe adverse events reported.
Comparison to another promising chemopreventive drug regimen that includes a
retinoid, "our complete response rate is lower than the one reported in a
smaller population," the authors write. Nevertheless, folate "is
characterized by a lower grade of toxicity," and there was no progression
of disease.
These results suggest, according to the researchers, "folate
supplementation, alone or in combination with other chemopreventive drugs, could
effectively reduce the risk of progression in an already genetically altered
mucosa, especially in patients with hypofolatemia."
###
Article: "Pilot Phase IIA Study for Evaluation of the Efficacy of Folic
Acid in the Treatment of Laryngeal Leucoplakia," Giovanni Almadori,
Francesco Bussu, Pierluigi Navarra, Jacopo Galli, Gaetano Paludetti, Bruno
Giardina, Maurizio Maurizi, CANCER; Published Online: June 2006 (DOI: 10.1002/cncr.22003);
Print Issue Date: July 15, 2006.