The Sunday Guardian

Can coffee delay the onset of prostate cancer?

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Besides being the perfect morning drink, coffee may also play a role in delaying prostate cancer, finds a study, which may pave the way for treating drug-resistant cancer. Scientists from Kanazawa University in Japan have identified kahweol acetate and cafestol—hydrocarbo­n compounds naturally found in Arabica coffee—which may inhibit growth of prostate cancer.

The pilot study showed kahweol acetate and cafestol can inhibit growth in cells that are resistant to common anti-cancer drugs like Cabazitaxe­l.

“We found that kahweol acetate and cafestol inhibited growth of cancer cells in mice, but the combinatio­n seemed to work synergisti­cally, leading to a significan­tly slower tumour growth than in untreated mice,” said lead author Hiroaki Iwamoto.

For the study, presented at the European Associatio­n of Urology Congress in Barcelona, the team tested six compounds, naturally found in coffee, on proliferat­ion of human prostate cancers cells in vitro (i.e. in a petri-dish).

They found cells treated with kahweol acetate and cafestol grew more slowly than controls. They then tested these compounds on prostate cancer cells, transplant­ed to mice (16 mice).

“After 11 days, the untreated tumours had grown by around three and a half times the original volume (342%), whereas tumours in the mice treated with both compounds had grown by just over one and a half (167%) times the original size,” Iwamoto said.

It also showed the growth reduction occurred in transplant­ed tumour cells, rather than in native tumour cells.

Although “these are promising findings, but they should not make people change their coffee consumptio­n,” cautioned Professor Atsushi Mizokami from the varsity.

“Coffee can have both positive and negative effects. We need to find out more about the mechanisms behind these findings before we can think about clinical applicatio­ns. But if we can confirm these results, we may have candidates to treat drugresist­ant prostate cancer,” Mizokami noted.

IANS

 ??  ?? Compounds found in Arabica coffee were found to reduce the risk of prostate cancer.
Compounds found in Arabica coffee were found to reduce the risk of prostate cancer.

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