Cancer researchers at Jefferson Medical College
and the Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University
in Philadelphia have found that zinc treatment may help prevent
esophageal and oral cancers in those individuals at high risk.
Oral and esophageal cancers are associated with nutritional
zinc deficiency, and a rise in the expression of the enzyme
COX-2 is connected with these cancers.
Louise Fong, Ph.D., assistant professor of microbiology and
immunology at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson
University, and her co-workers have found that zinc given
orally to zinc-deficient rats reverses the development of
precancerous conditions in the esophagus and tongue and reverses
the high expression of COX-2 there as well.
These findings suggest that zinc supplements may prevent
the development of esophageal or oral cancers, particularly
in developing countries where zinc deficiency is a problem.
The researchers reported their findings January 5, 2005 in
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Zinc in the
diet comes mostly from red meat and seafood. Whereas up to
10 percent of Americans have a zinc-deficient diet, as many
as 2 billion individuals in developing countries are zinc-deficient.
Epidemiological evidence show the incidence of esophageal
and oral cancers is rising in recent years. As many as 13,000
Americans die from esophageal cancer each year.
Dr. Fong has been studying zinc deficiency and its connection
to esophageal cancer for some 20 years, and has developed
animal models of zinc deficiency and cancer susceptibility.
Zinc deficiency, she says, increases cell proliferation in
the esophagus and in the tongue, making both areas susceptible
to carcinogens and increasing the risk of cancer development.
In 2002, Dr. Fong reported that rats given a carcinogen while
on a zinc-deficient diet developed esophageal cancer. Giving
zinc prevented the cancer.
Dr. Fong wanted to know if zinc could regulate COX-2 expression
in esophageal and tongue cancers. She and her co-workers compared
COX-2 protein and gene expression in esophageal and tongue
tissue in normal rats, zinc-deficient rats and in zinc-deficient
rats that had received zinc. They found COX-2 expression was
increased 10-to-15-fold in zinc-deficient rats. Cellular proliferation
was similarly increased. After giving zinc to the deficient
rats, COX-2 expression was markedly reduced and the precancerous
cellular proliferation was reversed. The rats lacking dietary
zinc were also treated with COX-2 inhibitors, celecoxib (Celebrex)
and indomethacin. They found that the rats treated with the
COX-2 inhibitors had a reduction in both COX-2 and cellular
proliferation in the esophagus.
"Zinc treatment restores many systems affected by the
lack of zinc," Dr. Fong notes. "Zinc deficiency
upregulates COX-2. Zinc replenishment restores it to near
normal levels." In the future, she and her co-workers
would like to determine whether zinc in combination with low
amounts of celecoxib can prevent upper aerodigestive tract
cancers, including esophageal and oral cancers.
Reference
Source 128
January 12, 2005