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News--
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Green tea extract may interfere with a process that helps early bladder cancer to spread throughout the body, new laboratory research suggests.
The findings, say researchers, bolster ongoing studies into
green tea extract as a cancer treatment -- and may give green
tea drinkers more reason to savor every cup.
The investigators found that when they exposed human
bladder cells to both a cancer-causing chemical and green tea
extract, the extract interfered with a particular process by
which early cancer cells become invasive and spread throughout
body tissue.
This process involves the "remodeling" of actin, a
structural protein in cells that is essential for cell
movement. Actin remodeling allows cancer cells to move and
invade nearby healthy tissue.
Based on the new findings, green tea extract may get in the
way of this process by activating a protein known as Rho, which
helps regulate actin's organization in cells and has been
implicated in tumor development and progression.
Dr. JianYu Rao and his colleagues at the University of
California Los Angeles report the findings in the journal
Clinical Cancer Research.
A number of studies have suggested that green tea and
extracts of the beverage may have cancer-preventing abilities,
possibly due to the tea's concentration of certain antioxidants
-- compounds that help ward off cell damage that can lead to
cancer, heart disease and other ills.
But exactly how green tea may act in the body to fight
cancer is not clear. Lab research has suggested it can act in
several ways -- from hindering tumors from forming their own
blood supply to forcing abnormal cells to commit suicide.
The current study points to an entirely new mechanism, Rao
told Reuters Health in an interview.
Green tea extract, he explained, appears to diminish cancer
cells' invasiveness -- suggesting that it could be used in the
early stages of cancer treatment.
One recent study found that green tea extract brought no
benefit to men with advanced prostate cancer. But Rao said that
any effects of the extract on cancer would probably occur in
the early stages.
He and his colleagues are now conducting a clinical trial
to see whether green tea extract can reduce the risk of bladder
cancer recurrence in patients with a history of smoking, which
is a risk factor for the disease.
Uncovering the details of how green tea may stymie cancer
could help doctors figure out which patients are likely to
benefit from treatment with extracts, Rao said. It may be
possible to look for specific markers of actin remodeling and
Rho activation in patients' urine to determine who is best
suited for such therapy.
It's also possible, Rao said, that drinking green tea could
reduce the risk of developing bladder cancer in the first place
-- though no one knows how many cups a person would have to sip
over a lifetime.
SOURCE: Clinical Cancer Research, February 15, 2005.
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