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Researchers believe beverage's catechins
have powerful antioxidant properties
By Serena Gordon HealthDay Reporter
A supplement containing antioxidants from green
tea was 90 percent effective in preventing prostate cancer in men
at high risk for the disease. That's the conclusion of an Italian
study that found after a year of taking green tea catechins, only
one man in a group of 32 who were at higher risk of prostate cancer
actually developed the disease, while nine men in a group of 30
high-risk men who took a placebo developed prostate cancer. "To
our knowledge, this is the first study showing that green tea catechins
(GTC) have potent chemoprevention activity for human prostate cancer,"
said study author Saverio Bettuzzi, an associate professor of biochemistry
in the School of Medicine at the University of Parma in Italy. Findings
from the study were presented April 20 at the American Association
for Cancer Research annual meeting, in Anaheim, Calif.
Other than skin cancer, prostate cancer is the
most common cancer affecting men. More than 230,000 American men
are diagnosed with this disease each year, according to the American
Cancer Society. Since many prostate cancers are found in their early
stages, about 99 percent of those diagnosed can expect to live at
least five years, while up to 92 percent survive for at least 10
years after their diagnosis. However, prostate cancer can be deadly.
The disease claims the lives of more than 30,000 men in the United
States annually, making it the second largest cancer killer in men.
Bettuzzi explained that while other studies, including
his own previous work, had shown that green tea could inhibit prostate
cancer cell growth in laboratory models, the researchers wanted
to know if it would work in humans. They recruited 62 men at high
risk of developing prostate cancer because they already had precancerous
lesions, which often turn into cancer within a year. The men were
between the ages of 45 and 75. The researchers excluded vegetarians
because they may already have a lower risk of developing prostate
cancer, men who already consumed green tea, and men taking antioxidant
supplements or hormone therapy. Thirty two of the men were asked
to take a 200-milligram pill containing green tea catechins three
times daily for a year; the other 30 men were given a placebo. Biopsies
were conducted at six months, and then again a year later. Remarkably,
only one man in the treatment group was diagnosed with prostate
cancer, while nine men in the control group developed the disease.
"A projection of our data suggests that up to
90 percent of chemoprevention efficacy could be obtained by GTC
administration in men prone to developing prostate cancer such as
the elderly, African-Americans and those with a family history of
prostate cancer," Bettuzzi said. However, Bettuzzi isn't recommending
that men start treating themselves with green tea or green tea supplements.
He said to consume an amount equivalent to that
used in the study, you would have to drink 12 to 15 cups of tea
daily, and that while supplements are commercially available, their
quality cannot be assured and they may contain caffeine, or more
alarmingly, pesticides or other contaminants. "This is a very interesting
observation that deserves to be studied further," said Dr. Jay Brooks,
chairman of hematology and oncology at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation
Hospital in New Orleans. But, he added, "Personally, I am not recommending
that my patients do this." Bettuzzi also said his findings need
to be confirmed in a larger study.
In the meantime, Brooks said that if you're concerned
about prostate cancer, be sure you maintain a healthy body weight
because obesity increases your risk. And, he said, make sure you
go to your doctor for proper prostate cancer screening.
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