By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Durham, N.C. -- A diet rich in flaxseed seems to reduce the
size, aggressiveness and severity of tumors in mice that have
been genetically engineered to develop prostate cancer,
according to new research from Duke University Medical Center.
And in 3 percent of the mice, the flaxseed diet kept them from
getting the disease at all.
"We are cautiously optimistic about these findings," said
Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, Ph.D., associate professor, division
of urology and senior author of the study that appears in the
November 2002 issue of the journal Urology. "The amount of
flaxseed given to each mouse was 5 percent of its total food
intake, which would be a very difficult amount for humans to
eat, but it does signal that we are on the right track and need
to continue research in this area."
According to Demark-Wahnefried, planned clinical trials must
be completed before it can be concluded that dietary flaxseed
is a useful protective against prostate cancer in humans.
The research was sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, the
National Cancer Institute
and the Committee for Urologic Research Education and
Development at Duke University Medical Center.
Clinical studies by other researchers have suggested that
dietary fiber reduces cancer risk, and omega-3 fatty acids also
have shown a protective benefit against cancer. Flaxseed is the
richest plant source of omega-3 fatty acids and is high in
fiber. Also, flaxseed is a source of lignan, a specific family
of fiber-related compounds that appear to play a role in
influencing both estrogen and testosterone metabolism. Since
testosterone may be important in the progression of prostate
cancer, lignan could help inhibit the growth and development of
the disease.
In the Duke study, 135 mice genetically engineered to
develop prostate cancer were divided into a control group and
an experimental group. The experimental group received a
regular mouse diet, but 5 percent of the diet was in the form
of flaxseed. Half of the mice in both groups were fed their
respective diets for 20 weeks and the remainder for 30 weeks.
At the 20- and 30-week end points, the mice were autopsied to
check for tumor growth and progression of the disease to other
organs.
"Tumors in the untreated control group were twice the size
of tumors in the flaxseed group," said Xu Lin, M.D., research
associate, division of urology and lead author of the study.
"The tumors were also less aggressive in the flaxseed group,
and two of the mice in the flaxseed group did not develop
prostate cancer at all. The rates of apoptosis (tumor cell
death) were also higher in the flaxseed group. And while it was
not statistically significant, the flaxseed group had fewer
rates of the cancer spreading to other organs. "
While the results are promising, the researchers say they
are not surprising. The study is the third in a series by the
Duke Medical Center researchers to show the benefits of
flaxseed in reducing the growth and development of prostate
cancer.
The first study, published in July 2001 in Urology,
demonstrated that a low-fat diet supplemented with flaxseed was
associated with slower tumor growth. In this pilot study, 25
men with prostate cancer began adding ground flaxseed to their
diets for 34 days. At the end of the study, the men saw a drop
in testosterone levels and a trend toward lower prostate
specific antigen (PSA) levels, a marker for prostate cancer.
The diet also was tolerated well and gave the authors hope for
this dietary intervention.
The second study, published in the November-December 2001
issue of Anticancer Research, examined the effect lignans have
on prostate cancer cell lines. This study showed that
flaxseed-derived lignans inhibited the growth of three distinct
human prostate cancer cell lines through hormonally dependent
and independent mechanisms.
"So far we have observed the suppression of prostate cancer
in humans, mice and at the cellular level," said Lin. "It's not
a fluke or a coincidence. It's an encouraging line of
research."
Demark-Wahnefried adds, "Our results are encouraging.
However, before we can truly state that flaxseed is beneficial
in humans, larger well-controlled trials are needed. The
National Cancer Institute
has provided us with the support to conduct a randomized
clinical trial in 160 men with prostate cancer that will
examine whether a low-fat diet, flaxseed supplementation or a
combination of low-fat diet and flaxseed supplementation will
be most effective in stopping prostate cancer cells from
dividing. That trial is currently under way."