Drinking
green tea could modulate the effect of smoking on lung cancer.
"Lung
cancer is the leading cause of all cancer deaths in Taiwan,"
said I-Hsin Lin, M.S., a student at Chung Shan Medical University in
Taiwan. "Tea, particularly green tea, has received a great deal
of attention because tea polyphenols are strong antioxidants, and tea
preparations have shown inhibitory activity against tumorigenesis."
However,
previous studies of green tea have been inhibited by the flaws of the
epidemiologic model with its inherent biases. Lin
and colleagues enrolled 170 patients with lung cancer and 340 healthy
patients as controls. The researchers administered questionnaires to
obtain demographic characteristics, cigarette smoking habits, green
tea consumption, dietary intake of fruits and vegetables, cooking
practices and family history of lung cancer. They also performed
genotyping on insulin-like growth factors as polymorphisms on the
following insulin-like growth factors: IGF1, IGF2 and IGFBP3, which
have all been reported to be associated with cancer risk.
Photo : iStockphoto, by Katarzyna Krawiec |
Lin
and colleagues suspect genetics may play a role in this risk
differential. Green tea drinkers with non-susceptible IGF1
(CA)19/(CA)19 and (CA)19/X genotypes reported a 66 percent reduction
in lung cancer risk as compared with green tea drinkers carrying the
IGF1 X/X genotype.
Heavy
smokers carrying susceptible IGF1, IGF2 and IGFBP3 genotypes also had
a higher risk of lung cancer compared with nonsmokers carrying
non-susceptible IGF1, IGF2 and IGFBP3 genotypes.
"Our
study may represent a clue that in the case of lung cancer,
smoking-induced carcinogenesis could be modulated by green tea
consumption and the growth factor environment," said Lin.
Note :
Results of this hospital-based, randomized study conducted in Taiwan were presented at the AACR-IASLC Joint Conference on Molecular Origins of Lung Cancer, held here from Jan. 11-14, 2010.
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