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Study
Shows Why Aspirin,
Fiber Prevent Cancer
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Painkillers such as aspirin
and ibuprofen may help prevent colon cancer by preventing tumor
cells from becoming immortal, and eating fiber may work in a similar
way, U.S. scientists reported on Wednesday.
Studies have shown that people
who regularly take aspirin and other related drugs known as non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDs have a lower risk of cancer.
So do people who eat a high-fiber diet.
But the mechanisms remain unclear.
In one study that may help explain
why, Dr. David Frank of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard
Medical School in Boston and colleagues noted that colon cancer
cells have abnormally high levels of an immune system protein
called interleukin-6 or IL-6.
Frank's team treated colon cancer
cells in the laboratory with NSAIDs such as ibuprofen, aspirin
and sulindac. They also tested butyrate, a compound produced when
the body breaks down dietary fiber.
They found that IL-6 in turn activates
another protein called STAT1, which shuts down a process called
cell suicide. Cells are programmed to self-destruct at a certain
age or when they become damaged, but STAT1 interferes with this
process. The cells become immortal, starting the out-of-control
proliferation that results in a tumor.
The painkillers stop IL-6 from
activating STAT1, Franks' team found. Butyrate also blocks IL-6,
but through a different mechanism, they found.
They were scheduled to present
their findings to an annual meeting of the American Association
of Cancer Research in Toronto this week, but the meeting was canceled
because of fears about an outbreak of severe acute respiratory
syndrome.
The next step is to find more direct
ways to block the STAT1 protein in patients who have already developed
cancer, Frank said.
In a second study that was to be
presented at AACR, a team at Ohio State University said they found
that women who took the painkillers regularly had a lower risk
of breast cancer.
"These results suggest that even
women at high risk for breast cancer may be protected by taking
NSAIDs," said Dr. Randall Harris, who led the study.
But more research is needed before
doctors start telling women to take ibuprofen to prevent breast
cancer, Harris said in a statement.
His team looked at data from the
National Cancer Institute's Women's Health Initiative, which follows
tens of thousands of women, their habits, and their health.
They found that women who took
two or more NSAIDs a week for five to nine years reduced their
risk of breast cancer by 21 percent. Low-dose aspirin, often recommended
to protect against heart disease, had no effect, but regular-dose
aspirin did.
Reference
Source 89
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