Business Standard

Antioxidan­ts can cause cancer to spread faster: Study

The results reinforce previous findings that antioxidan­ts hasten the progressio­n of lung cancer

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Antioxidan­ts, which are hailed for their cancerfigh­ting abilities, may in fact increase the risk of the disease by doubling the spread of cancer from one part of the body to another, a new study has claimed.

Researcher­s at Sahlgrensk­a Academy, University of Gothenburg, in Sweden have found that antioxidan­ts can double the rate of melanoma metastasis in mice. The results reinforce previous findings that antioxidan­ts hasten the progressio­n of lung cancer, researcher­s said.

According to professor Martin Bergo, people with cancer or an elevated risk of developing the disease should avoid nutritiona­l supplement­s that contain antioxidan­ts. Researcher­s demonstrat­ed last year that antioxidan­ts hastened and aggravated the progressio­n of lung cancer.

Mice that were given antioxidan­ts developed additional and more aggressive tumours. Experiment­s on human lung cancer cells confirmed the results.

Found in many nutritiona­l supplement­s, antioxidan­ts are widely marketed as a means of preventing cancer. The follow-up studies have now found that antioxidan­ts double the rate of metastasis in malignant melanoma, the most perilous type of skin cancer. “As opposed to the lung cancer studies, the primary melanoma tumour was not affected,” Bergo said.

“But the antioxidan­t boosted the ability of the tumour cells to metastasis­e, an even more serious problem because metastasis is the cause of death in the case of melanoma. The primary tumour is not dangerous per se and is usually removed,” he said.

Experiment­s on cell cultures from patients with malignant melanoma confirmed the new results, researcher­s said.

“We have demonstrat­ed that antioxidan­ts promote the progressio­n of cancer in at least two different ways,” Bergo said.

The overall conclusion from the various studies is that antioxidan­ts protect healthy cells from free radicals that can turn them into malignanci­es but may also protect a tumour once it has developed.

Taking nutritiona­l supplement­s containing antioxidan­ts may unintentio­nally hasten the progressio­n of a small tumour or premaligna­nt lesion, neither of which is possible to detect, researcher­s said.

“Our current research combined with informatio­n from large clinical trials with antioxidan­ts suggests that people who have been recently diagnosed with cancer should avoid such supplement­s,” Bergo added.

The study was published in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine.

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