Cancer Prevention: Eat Your Cabbage?
Can eating your broccoli and cabbage help protect you against
lung cancer? According to a study published in the October 29,
2005 issue of the British medical journal, Lancet, the answer is
yes.
This isn't the first time that it's been suggested that
cruciferous vegetables may have a preventive effect against lung
cancer, but it is the largest scale study to date. There have
been a number of smaller observational studies that reported a
possible link between the vegetables and lung cancer prevention,
but they were considered to be too small to be definitive. This
study, conducted by a group of researchers at the Genetic
Epidemiology Group at the International Agency for Research on
Cancer in Lyon, France, compared 2,141 people diagnosed with
lung cancer with a group of healthy people in the Czech
Republic, Romania, Russia, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia. They
chose countries where the consumption of vegetables like
cabbage, broccoli and Brussels sprouts has been traditionally
high.
"We found protective effects with at least weekly consumption of
cruciferous vegetables," the research letter in the Lancet
stated.
Researchers believe that the beneficial effects of cruciferous
vegetables are due to the high content of isothiocyanates,
phytonutrients that seem to have a strong anti-cancer effect.
They are a more bioavailable form of glucosinolates, which also
have been shown to have anti-cancer effects. The research
conducted at Lyons takes the knowledge a step further.
Studies have shown that isothiocyanates neutralize cancerous
cells by inhibiting cell proliferation. The cycle of a normal
cell in the body proceeds from cell division, through
specialization, and eventually, when the cell has either become
damaged or has finished doing its job, to apoptosis - or cell
death. The problem with cancer cells is that they don't go
through apoptosis. For some reason, their mutations make them
resistant to the message that it's time to die. Isothiocyanates
appear to be a catalyst that triggers apoptosis. In laboratory
experiments, they've induced apoptosis in a number of cell
lines. They also seem to slow proliferation of a number of types
of cancer cells, including lung cancer lines.
The researchers at Lyons found that there is also a correlation
between genetics and the preventive effect of cruciferous
vegetables. There are two genes that produce an enzyme that
remove isothiocyanates from the body. The Lyons study correlated
the results from a diet questionnaire with blood tests to
determine whether those studied had inactive or active forms of
those genes. They found that in people who had an inactive form
of one of the two genes had a 37% lower risk of developing lung
cancer. Those with an inactive form of the other had a 33% lower
risk of developing lung cancer. In those with both genes
inactive, there was a 72% reduction in lung cancer risk. In
those who had two active gene types, there was no difference in
risk at all.
Said Paul Brennan, lead author of the research letter, "...this
indicates that there is a specific protective effect against
lung cancer from cruciferous vegetables."
Random trials to absolutely confirm the findings would be
expensive and time consuming, Brennan notes. In the meantime,
though, including cabbage, kale, Brussels sprouts, broccoli or
turnips in your diet at least once a week may help reduce your
risk of developing lung cancer.