 |  | 

LOW DOSE FISH OIL SUPPLEMENTATION INHIBITS TUMOR GROWTH
- MAY BE SAFE, POWERFUL, NON-TOXIC ADJUNCT THERAPY IN CHEMOTHERAPY
Great Smokies Diagnostic Laboratory
A safe, simple clinical intervention to slightly increase the amount
of omega-3 fatty acid nutrients in the diet may pack a powerful
clinical wallop, helping to fight the growth of cancerous tumors and
reducing negative side effects associated with chemotherapy.
In an experimental study, researchers from the University of Texas
Health Science Center recently evaluated the effect of dietary fat
consumption on the growth of cancer tumors in laboratory mice. The
tumors had formed in response to the proliferation of
estrogen-dependent breast cancer cells (MDA-MB 231).
One group of mice was fed a diet containing 5% corn oil. The other
group consumed a diet with 2% corn oil and 3% fish oil concentrate
(34% EPA, 24% DHA, and other omega-3 fatty acids).
The researchers
purposely chose to study supplementation with a relatively small
amount of fish oil, one that translated into just 7% of total
calories consumed per day, because this proportion represents an
amount that humans could easily incorporate into their diets. (For a
human eating 1800 calories a day, this equals about 14 g of fish oil
per day).
Over the next few weeks, investigators regularly tracked oxidative
stress and tumor growth in the mice, evaluating clinical impact in
response to fish oil supplementation as well as to treatment with
doxorubicin (DOX), a drug commonly used in chemotherapy.
After just two weeks, even this modest amount of fish oil raised
levels of omega-3 (EPA) in the cell membranes of the livers and
tumors of the mice. And after just five weeks, low dose omega-3
supplementation was deemed just as effective in slowing tumor growth
as DOX chemotherapy.
While previous experimental studies have reported that omega-3 fatty
acids markedly suppress tumor growth, these new results indicate that
a significant anti-tumor effect may be achieved at lower doses, over
shorter intervention periods.
An important synergistic effect was also found. When fish oil
supplementation was combined with DOX, tumor growth was slowed even
further - without increasing toxic side effects of chemotherapy.
In
fact, adding fish oil to the diet reduced weight loss associated with
DOX, helping to avert this negative side effect of chemotherapy.
Overall, this evidence suggests that fatty acid supplementation, when
sustained between cycles of cancer chemotherapy, "may slow the growth
of residual tumor…and aid patient recovery…" the researchers
suggested
Scientists were not sure exactly how fish oil put the brakes on tumor
growth. One possibility is that by increasing free radical activity
and oxidative stress inside the tumor, it caused cancer cells to die
off (apoptosis).
Interestingly, when it came to free radical
activity, fish oil seemed "smart" enough to distinguish "friend" from
"foe." Although supplementation increased oxidative stress inside
the tumor, outside the tumor (in the liver), it paradoxically reduced
free radical activity.
Whatever its exact mechanisms, fish oil appears to be a safe and
promising adjunct treatment to suppress tumor growth and reduce
chemotherapy side effects, they observed. They recommended that
clinical trials with cancer patients be undertaken to further study
the potential clinical benefits of supplementation.
Source: Hardman WE, Avula CPR, Fernandes G, Cameron IL. Three percent
dietary fish oil concentrate increased efficacy of doxorubicin
against MDA-MB 231 breast cancer xenografts. Clin Can Res
2001;7:2041-2049.
Sent by The MID HUDSON OPTIONS PROJECT,
INC a grassroots Breast Cancer Health Advocacy, Support and Activist Group.
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|