Lycopene, Vitamin E
Reduce Prostate Tumors
Scientists are testing the impact of
vitamin E and a synthetic version of lycopene, a compound in tomatoes,
in cancer patients after they found that the combination slowed
the growth of prostate tumors in mice.
Lycopene is what gives tomatoes
their rich red color. Studies have suggested that it can reduce
the risk of prostate cancer.
Dr Jacqueline Limpens, of the Erasmus
Medical Center in Rotterdam, presented new research at a medical
meeting on Thursday showing that in mice studies, the impact of
lycopene can be enhanced by twinning it with vitamin E.
"The combination of lycopene and
vitamin E produced the most active response and the most significant,"
Limpens said in a telephone news conference from the meeting in
Geneva.
She and her team tested low and
high doses of synthetic lycopene alone and combined with vitamin
E and a combination of low dose lycopene and low vitamin E against
a placebo in mice injected with human prostate cancer cells.
"What was particularly marked was
that it was the low dose of both lycopene and vitamin E that was
the most effective, demonstrating that 'more does not necessarily
equal better,"' said Limpens.
The combination reduced the growth
of the tumors by 73 percent by the 42nd day of the trial.
A study testing the compounds in
cancer patients is now under way. Prostate cancer kills about
200,000 men each year, mostly in developed countries. Most men
diagnosed with the disease are usually 65 or older.
The incidence of the disease is
rising in many countries but experts believe it is due largely
to improved screening. It is usually treated with surgery or radiation
treatment.
Limpens said the findings are in
line with research suggesting that vitamin E and lycopene could
have a protective effect against prostate cancer.
"Therefore we would certainly recommend
that all men regularly eat lycopene and vitamin-E-rich foods:
for example, all kinds of processed tomato products, papayas,
pink grapefruit and watermelon, wheat germs, whole grains, mangoes,
leafy green vegetables, nuts and olive oils," she added in a statement.
Reference
Source 89
September30, 2004
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