Curcumin's ability to wage war on cancer stem cells further verified by research
(NaturalNews) Promising new research has demonstrated once again that
the ingredient curcumin, which is the principal curcuminoid of the
widely used Indian spice turmeric, a member of the ginger family, is a
major cancer fighter, this time proving effective against esophageal
cancer.
According to researchers at the
University of Kansas' Cancer Center and Medical Center, study results indicate that "curcumin
inhibits the growth of esophageal cancer cell lines," though how it
works "is not well understood."
The results of the study are
especially noteworthy given that esophageal cancer is the eighth most
common type of cancer in the world and the sixth most lethal.
This 'novel' cancer treatment works wondersIn
the U.S. alone, between four and 10 persons for every 100,000 die from
esophageal cancer every year. The disease mostly strikes men over the
age of 50, according to published statistics.
In 2011, the
American Cancer Society estimated
that 16,980 Americans (13,450 men and 3,530 women) were diagnosed with
the disease. The organization also estimated that a majority of those
diagnosed with esophageal cancer - about eight in 10 - would die.
"Esophageal
adenocarcinoma, the major form of esophageal cancer in the U.S., is the
most rapidly rising cancer in the western world," said a summary of the
study's results. "It is generally diagnosed at a late stage and has a
poor prognosis, with a five-year survival of less than 10 percent."
"Although
the current treatment includes chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and, if
possible, esophagogastric resection, many patients with esophageal
adenocarcinoma experience progression of disease despite such treatment,
suggesting that such tumors are resistant to standard therapy," the
summary said.
Enter
curcumin therapy. Other "novel" forms of treatment and therapy have not proven
as effective, say researchers, especially in patients who have advanced
cancer.
"The magnitude of this problem mandates the need for
novel therapeutic agents, specifically the use of agents for
chemoprevention. This is most attractive for esophageal adenocarcinoma
since a pre-malignant condition, Barrett's esophagus, is a
well-recognized lesion," says the summary.
In short, a common form of
cancer that is resistant to current standard treatments is being bested by treatment with an age-old spice.
"Curcumin
seems to have multiple molecular targets and its enhanced potency in
cancer in various cancer cell lines and xenograft tumors renders it a
strong candidate for therapeutic applications for esophageal cancer as
well as other cancers and inflammatory disease states," said the study.
Dramatic reductions in the spread of cancerPrevious
research has also found that curcumin - and its primary element, turmeric - have
been found to reduce cancer growth and brain tumors as much as 81
percent.
"Used by ancient Chinese and Indian systems of medicine,
curcumin has been shown to reduce brain tumor size by 81 percent in 9
out of 11 studies," say researchers from the
University of California-Los Angeles.
"Turmeric
and curcumin are both extremely cheap methods of boosting your health,
and are readily available almost worldwide," said Mike Barrett,
co-founder of alternative health organization,
Natural Society. "The ubiquitous nature of
turmeric both in the form of supplementation and spice sets up turmeric to be
the next vitamin D over the next few years. As more medical
professionals begin to recognize the benefits of turmeric and curcumin, a
major media blitz will follow as it did regarding the multiple known
effects of vitamin D."
In the UCLA study, 21 participants who had
contracted head and neck cancer saw the spread of their disease halted
after being given chewable supplements containing 1,000 mg of curcumin
each.
"Curcumin, the main component in the spice turmeric,
suppresses a cell signaling pathway that drives the growth of head and
neck cancer, according to a pilot study using human saliva by
researchers at
UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center," the
National Cancer Institute, part of the
National Institutes of Health, said, confirming the university's results.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/038184_curcumin_cancer_stem_cells_research.html