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Fatty Acid May Spur Prostate Cancer Growth
Balancing omega-6 fatty acids with omega-3s is the prudent
course, study suggests
By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
THURSDAY, Feb. 2 (HealthDay News) -- A common fat found
in corn oil appears to increase the growth of prostate cancer
tumors, researchers report.
Omega-6 fatty acids appear to cause human prostate tumors
to grow twice as fast as tumors not exposed to omega-6 fats,
according to the researchers at the San Francisco Veterans
Administration Medical Center.
One particular omega-6 fatty acid, arachidonic acid, turns
on a gene that leads directly to tumor growth, the researchers
found. Their report appears in the Feb. 1 issue of Cancer
Research.
"Some of the fat [that] people eat can actually trigger
growth of tumors," said lead researcher Millie Hughes-Fulford,
director of the Laboratory of Cell Growth.
Omega-6 doesn't cause cancer, Hughes-Fulford stressed. "It's
more like a promoter for a latent tumor to be able to grow,"
she added.
In its study, Hughes-Fulford's team treated prostate cancer
tumor cells in a laboratory with omega-6 fatty acid. They
found these cells grew twice as fast as similar cells not
exposed to omega-6.
In addition, the researchers found when
they added a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory, or a PI3K
inhibitor, such as what's found in painkillers, the gene
did not get switched on and tumor cell growth did not occur.
Since the early 1960s, Americans have been consuming more
and more corn oil, Hughes-Fulford noted. "Corn oil
is very high in omega-6 fatty acid," she said. "We
are eating about 25-fold more of this than we were eating
at the turn of the century."
Hughes-Fulford stressed this added consumption of corn oil
is not increasing the risk of all cancers in all people.
"But we have seen it in colorectal cancer, now we have
seen it in prostate, and some people have seen the same
type of thing in breast cancer," she said. "One
has to ask the question: Why would one increase one's diet
in something that could be associated with an increased
incidence of tumor growth?"
Hughes-Fulford advises cutting down on the amount of omega-6
fatty acids in the diet. "What I have done, and all
the people that know my work have done, is we have mainly
switched over to olive oil and canola oil," she said.
"It's a matter of choices," Hughes-Fulford said.
"For a healthy lifestyle, it's not a secret, omega-3
fatty acids are good and omega-6 acids are not as good.
You need some omega-6, it's just that it's much better if
we moderate our intake of omega-6 acids."
Fish and green vegetables are other good sources of omega-3
fatty acids, she said.
One prostate cancer expert said the new finding is consistent
with research experiments his group has performed.
"A growing body of evidence suggests that omega-6 fatty
acids may play an important role in the progression of prostate
cancer," said Dr. William Aronson, an associate clinical
professor of urology at the University of California, Los
Angeles.
"The backbone of the American diet, corn oil, is a
rich supply of linoleic acid -- omega-6," Aronson said.
"Linoleic acid is converted in the body to arachidonic
acid. Our group has previously demonstrated that reducing
dietary corn oil slowed the progression of human prostate
cancers grown in mice."
Aronson believes the results of these studies will lead
to ways to slow down the progression of prostate cancer.
"By either reducing omega-6 fatty acid intake or possibly
using targeted therapies that effect increased P13K signaling
by arachidonic acid, hopefully, investigators will develop
successful strategies for preventing the progression of
prostate cancer," he said.
SOURCES: Millie Hughes-Fulford, Ph.D., director, Laboratory
of Cell Growth, San Francisco Veterans Administration Medical
Center; William Aronson, M.D., associate clinical professor,
urology, and chief, urology, University of California Los
Angeles Medical Center; Ajit K. Verma, Ph.D., professor,
department of human oncology, University of Wisconsin Medical
School, Madison; Feb. 1, 2006,
Cancer Research
Copyright © 2006 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.
http://www.prostatecancerfoundation.org/site/
c.itIWK2OSG/b.1406337/k.E976/ Fatty_Acid_May
_Spur_Prostate_Cancer_Growth.htm
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