Omega-3
vetzuren tegen prostaatkanker.*
Een
studie met dieren laat zien dat het vermeerderen van omega-3 vetzuren en het
verlagen van omega-6 vetzuren in de voeding het proces van prostaatkanker danig
kan vertragen. Terwijl in een typisch westers dieet tegenwoordig de verhouding
tussen omega-6 en omega-3 vetzuren wel 20:1 bedraagt is een ideale waarde 1:1.
In de studie nu kregen muizen of een 15:1 dieet of een 1:1 dieet, terwijl de
hoeveelheid vetten voor beide gelijk was. In de 1:1 groep werd de groei van de
kankercellen 22% lager en de PSA waarden daalden met 77%. Deze groep vertoonde
ook een 83% lagere vorming van bepaalde Tumor prostagladines E-2 (PGE-2), de
prostagladines die ontstekingen, pijn en tumorgroei veroorzaken. Nu blijkt dat
omega-3 vetzuren veel minder prostagladines doet vormen dan omega-6 vetzuren.
Verder concurreren de omega-3 vetzuren met de omega-6 vetzuren in de vorming van
prostagladines samen met het COX-1 en-2 enzym. Het COX enzym zet omega-6
vetzuren om in prostagladines. Hoe meer omega-3 vetzuur voor handen is des te
minder omega-6 vetzuren kunnen omgezet worden.
Altering
Dietary Ratio of Omega-6 to Omega-3 Fatty Acids May Reduce Prostate Cancer
Growth Rate and PSA Levels
UCLA researchers found that altering the
fatty acid ratio found in the typical Western diet to include more omega-3 fatty
acids and decrease the amount of omega-6 fatty acids may reduce prostate cancer
tumor growth rates and PSA levels.
Published in the Aug. 1 issue of the
journal Clinical Cancer Research, this initial animal-model study is one of the
first to show the impact of diet on lowering an inflammatory response known to
promote prostate cancer tumor progression and could lead to new treatment
approaches.
The omega-6 fatty acids contained in corn,
safflower oils and red meats are the predominant polyunsaturated fatty acids in
the Western diet. The healthier marine omega-3 fatty acids are found in
cold-water fish like salmon, tuna and sardines.
"Corn oil is the backbone of the
American diet. We consume up to 20 times more omega-6 fatty acids in our diet
compared to omega-3 acids," said principal investigator Dr. William Aronson,
a professor in the department of urology at the David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA and a researcher with UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center. "This study
strongly suggests that eating a healthier ratio of these two types of fatty
acids may make a difference in reducing prostate cancer growth, but studies need
to be conducted in humans before any clinical recommendations can be made"
Scientists used a special mouse model for
hormone-sensitive prostate cancer that closely mirrors the disease in humans.
Researchers fed one group of mice a diet comprised of 20 percent fat with a
healthy one-to-one ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids. A second group of
mice were fed the same diet but with the fat derived from mostly omega-6 fatty
acids.
The study showed that tumor cell growth
rates decreased by 22 percent and PSA levels were 77 percent lower in the group
receiving a healthier balance of fatty acids compared with the group that
received predominantly omega-6 fatty acids.
The most likely mechanism for the tumor
reductions, according to researchers, was due to an increase of the prostate
tumor omega-3 fatty acids DHA and EPA and a lowering of the omega-6 acid known
as arachidonic acid. These three fatty acids compete to be converted by
cyclooxgenase enzymes (COX-1 and COX-2) into prostaglandins, which can become
either pro-inflammatory and increase tumor growth, or anti-inflammatory and
reduce growth.
Researchers found that pro-inflammatory
prostaglandin (PGE-2) levels were 83 percent lower in tumors in the omega-3
group than in mice on the predominantly omega-6 fatty acid diet, demonstrating
that higher levels of DHA and EPA may lead to development of more
anti-inflammatory prostaglandins.
"This is one of the first studies
showing changes in diet can impact the inflammatory response that may play a
role in prostate cancer tumor growth," Aronson said. "We may be able
to use EPA and DHA supplements while also reducing omega-6 fatty acids in the
diet as a cancer prevention tool or possibly to reduce progression in men with
prostate cancer."
Currently, the research team is conducting
a clinical trial with men who are undergoing prostate removal due to cancer to
compare the effects of a low-fat diet using omega-3 supplements and a balanced
Western diet. Aronson said that positive findings from this study may lead to
larger clinical trials.
In addition, Aronson said that further
study might show that COX-2 inhibitors or non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDS)
combined with omega-3 supplements also may lower the inflammatory response in
prostate cancer development.
The study was funded by the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the National Institute of Health Grants: Specialized Programs
of Research Excellence and UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center.
Other study authors include: Naoko
Kobayashi, R. James Barnard, Susanne M. Henning, David Elashoff, Srinivasa T.
Reddy, Pinchas Cohen, Pak Leung, Jenny Hong-Gonzalez, Stephen J. Freedland,
Jonathan Said, Dorina Gui, Navindra P. Seerum, Laura M. Popoviciu, Dilprit Bagga,
David Heber, and John A. Glaspy.
-UCLA- (Aug. 2006) (Opm. Meer over vetzuren klik hier.)