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High Levels of Vitamin E Cut Prostate Cancer Risk
Wed Mar 2, 2005 01:05 PM ET
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - High blood levels of the major
vitamin E components, alpha- and gamma-tocopherol, seem
to cut the risk of prostate cancer by about 50 percent each,
a study shows.
The findings are based on an analysis of 100 individuals
with prostate cancer and 200 cancer-free "controls"
participating in the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer
Prevention (ATBC) Study, which included nearly 30,000 Finnish
men.
Men with the highest levels of alpha-tocopherol in their
blood at baseline were 51 percent less likely to develop
prostate cancer than those with the lowest levels, report
investigators in this week's Journal of the National Cancer
Institute (NCI).
Similarly, men with the highest levels of gamma-tocopherol
were 43 percent less likely to develop the disease compared
with men with the lowest levels.
Further analysis showed that the link between high tocopherol
levels and low cancer risk was stronger among subjects using
alpha-tocopherol supplements than among non-users.
This supports the original findings from the ATBC study,
which showed that daily vitamin E supplementation reduced
the risk of prostate cancer by 32 percent.
Dr. Demetrius Albanes, from the NCI in Bethesda, Maryland,
and colleagues believe that the antioxidant activity of
vitamin E may be particularly important to the associations
they observed in the current study because oxidative stress
has been tied to the development of prostate cancer.
However, alpha-tocopherol has other non-antioxidant properties,
such as enhancement of the immune response, which may also
play a role in the benefits seen, they add.
SOURCE: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, March
2, 2005.
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