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2005-07-11 Cory Hatch
The Asian spice that gives curried rice its bright yellow color could
someday provide researchers with a new way to fight skin cancer.
Small doses of curcumin, a spice ground from the turmeric root and a
common ingredient in curry, not only stopped the growth of melanoma
cells in the lab but also caused the cells to self-destruct, say
researchers from the University of Texas's M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center in Houston.
The researchers tested curcumin on lab-grown melanoma cells to see if
the spice could stop the cells from surviving and reproducing. The
more curcumin they added to the melanoma, the more cells died. Unlike
normal cells, cancer cells grow uncontrollably and do not
self-destruct. Increased doses of curcumin also stopped the melanoma
cells from reproducing.
One coauthor of the paper, which will be published in the August 15
issue of the journal Cancer, Bharat Aggarwal, said curcumin is
intriguing to researchers because of its low toxicity. While most
forms of chemotherapy cause serious adverse reactions in cancer
patients, studies have shown that people can tolerate large amounts
of curcumin with no ill effects. Curcumin also works as an
antioxidant and an anti-inflammatory agent.
"People from countries like India have been taking it for
thousands of years," says Aggarwal. "It is well tolerated.
Here is a completely nontoxic anti-inflammatory agent."
Doctors diagnose roughly 53,600 people with melanoma each year. The
cancerous cells develop as irregularly shaped and colored moles on
the surface of the skin. The cancer resists many chemotherapy
treatments and can metastasize, spreading to other organs in the
body.
Aggarwal and his colleagues believe that curcumin blocks the signals
a cancer cell needs to survive. David Fisher, director of the
melanoma program at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, said that
looking at how curcumin blocks these signals was one of the more
important discoveries in this paper.
But is Indian food really a cure for cancer? While this laboratory
evidence is interesting, researchers say, it doesn't prove that
curcumin will help fight cancer in humans. "It's way in its
infancy," Allan Halpern, chief of dermatology at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, says of the research. "The
problem is that, to date, we do not have is clinical data to support
the fact that using these agents as a chemo-preventative strategy is
effective."
In the meantime, Aggarwal and his colleagues continue to tests
curcumin on a wide variety of cancers, including breast cancer.
"Curcumin is a perfect alternative [to chemotherapy], but we
have to prove that it works," he says.
Find out more: The National Cancer Institute has an extensive
web page on melanoma.
Abstract online: www3.interscience.wiley.com
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