The Chinese Herb Compound Artemisinin may prevent Breast Cancer
By Stephen Daniells
12/20/2005 - The Chinese herb compound Artemisinin may prevent breast cancer,
say researchers from the University of Washington.
The compound, extracted from sweet wormwood Artemisia annua L, cut the development
of breast cancer by 40 per cent in rats that had been given a cancer-causing
agent. Artemisinin has previously been shown to selectively kill cancer cells,
and is already used as an effective anti-malaria treatment. “With the results
of this study, it's an attractive candidate for cancer prevention,” said
researcher Henry Lai.
The study, published in the January 2006 issue of Cancer Letters (vol 231,
issue 1, pp 43-48), used rats treated with a single dose of DMBA (50 mg per
kg), a compound known to induce multiple breast cancer. The rats were then randomly
divided into two groups, with one group's feed supplemented with 0.02 per cent
artemisinin.
The rats with the supplemented feed showed a 40 per cent lower incidence of
breast cancer formation than the control group. In addition, the tumours that
did develop in the case group were smaller and fewer.
“Since artemisinin is a relatively safe compound that causes no known
side effects even at high oral doses, the present data indicate that artemisinin
may be a potent cancer-chemoprevention agent,” said the researchers.
Artemisinin works by reacting with iron in the body and forming free radicals
that attack the cells from within. Cancer cells replicate at a higher rate than
normal cells and so have a higher concentration of iron. This makes artemisinin
highly toxic to the cancer cells.
The same mechanism is responsible for its anti-malarial properties. The parasite
that causes malaria cannot eliminate the iron from the blood cells it eats and
stores it. The artemisinin makes the stored iron poisonous to the parasite.
Artemisinin is now a major component in the treatment of malaria is China,
Vietnam and other areas of Asia and Africa.
But the results of the present study were greeted with guarded optimism by
Dr Emma Knight, science information officer for British charity Cancer Research
UK.
She told NutraIngredients.com: “These findings in rats are very interesting
but more work is needed to assess whether artemisinin could have a role in cancer
prevention in humans.”
Dr Knight stressed the importance of investigating naturally occurring compounds,
however, and exploiting the potential health benefits that may be on offer.
“Contrary to popular belief, a number of anti-cancer drugs are derived
from natural sources. The periwinkle, yew tree and African bush willow are just
some of the plants that have an important place in the treatment of cancer today,”
she said.
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