Next time you need to choose between
vegetable oil and margarine in that favorite recipe, think about your health
and reach for the oil.
While
the question of whether vitamin E prevents or promotes cancer has been widely
debated in scientific journals and in the news media, scientists at
the Center for Cancer Prevention Research, at Rutgers Mario School of Pharmacy,
and the Cancer Institute of New Jersey, believe that two forms of vitamin E –
gamma and delta-tocopherols – found in soybean, canola and corn oils as well as
nuts do prevent colon, lung, breast and prostate cancers.
"There
are studies suggesting that vitamin E actually increases the risk of cancer and
decreases bone density," says Chung S. Yang, director of the center.
"Our message is that the vitamin E form of gamma-tocopherols, the most
abundant form of vitamin E in the American diet, and delta-tocopherols, also
found in vegetable oils, are beneficial in preventing cancers while the form of
vitamin E, alpha- tocopherol, the most commonly used in vitamin E supplements,
has no such benefit."
Yang
and colleagues, Nanjoo Suh and Ah-Ng Tony Kong, summarized their findings
recently in Cancer
Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer
Research. In a Commentary, "Does Vitamin E Prevent or Promote
Cancer?" the Rutgers scientists discuss animal studies done at Rutgers as
well as human epidemiological studies that have examined the connection between
vitamin E and cancer.
Yang
says Rutgers scientists conducting animal studies for colon, lung, breast and
prostate cancer found that the forms of vitamin E in vegetable oils, gamma and
delta-tocopherols, prevent cancer formation and growth in animal models.
"When
animals are exposed to cancer-causing substances, the group that was fed these
tocopherols in their diet had fewer and smaller tumors," Yang says.
"When cancer cells were injected into mice these tocopherols also slowed
down the development of tumors."
In
researching colon cancer, Yang pointed to another recently published paper in Cancer
Prevention Research indicating that the delta-tocopherol form of
vitamin E was more effective than other forms of vitamin E in suppressing the
development of colon cancer in rats.
This is
good news for cancer research. Recently, in one of the largest prostate cancer
clinical trials in the United States and Canada, scientists found that the most
commonly used form of vitamin E supplements, alpha-tocopherol, not only did not
prevent prostate
cancer, but its use significantly increased the risk of this disease among
healthy men.
This is
why, Yang says, it is important to distinguish between the different forms of
vitamin E and conduct more research on its cancer preventive and
other biological effects.
"For
people who think that they need to take vitamin E supplements," Yang says,
"taking a mixture of vitamin E that
resembles what is in our diet would be the most prudent supplement to take."
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