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Common
Food Additive found to increase risk and
speed spread of Lung Cancer
Newswise — New research in an animal model
suggests that a diet high in inorganic
phosphates, which are found in a variety of
processed foods including meats, cheeses,
beverages, and bakery products, might speed
growth of lung cancer tumors and may even
contribute to the development of those
tumors in individuals predisposed to the
disease.
The study also suggests that dietary
regulation of inorganic phosphates may play
an important role in lung cancer treatment.
The research, using a mouse model, was
conducted by Myung-Haing Cho, D.V.M., Ph.D.,
and his colleagues at Seoul National
University, appears in the first issue for
January of the American Journal of
Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine,
published by the American Thoracic Society.
“Our study indicates that increased intake
of inorganic phosphates strongly stimulates
lung cancer development in mice, and
suggests that dietary regulation of
inorganic phosphates may be critical for
lung cancer treatment as well as
prevention,” said Dr. Cho.
Lung cancer is the number one cause of
cancer deaths in the world and is also the
most frequently diagnosed solid tumor.
Non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
constitutes over 75 percent of lung cancers
and has an average overall 35-year survival
rate of 14 percent.
Earlier studies have indicated that
approximately 90 percent of NSCLC cases were
associated with activation of certain
signaling pathways in lung tissue.
This study revealed that high levels of
inorganic phosphates can stimulate those
same pathways.
“Lung cancer is a disease of uncontrolled
cell proliferation in lung tissue, and
disruption of signaling pathways in those
tissues can confer a normal cell with
malignant properties,” Dr. Cho explained.
"Deregulation of only a small set of
pathways can confer a normal cell with
malignant properties, and these pathways are
regulated in response to nutrient
availability and, consequently, cell
proliferation and growth.
“Phosphate is an essential nutrient to
living organisms, and can activate some
signals,” he added. “This study demonstrates
that high intake of inorganic phosphates may
strongly stimulate lung cancer development
by altering those (signaling) pathways.”
In the study, lung cancer-model mice were
studied for four weeks and were randomly
assigned to receive a diet of either 0.5 or
1.0 percent phosphate, a range roughly
equivalent to modern human diets.
At the end of the four-week period, the lung
tissue was analyzed to determine the effects
of the inorganic phosphates on tumors.
“Our results clearly demonstrated that the
diet higher in inorganic phosphates caused
an increase in the size of the tumors and
stimulated growth of the tumors,” Dr. Cho
said.
Dr. Cho noted that while a moderate level of
phosphate plays an essential role in living
organisms, the rapidly increasing use of
phosphates as a food additive has resulted
in significantly higher levels in average
daily diets. Phosphates are added to many
food products to increase water retention
and improve food texture.
“In the 1990s, phosphorous-containing food
additives contributed an estimated 470 mg
per day to the average daily adult diet,” he
said.
“However, phosphates are currently being
added much more frequently to a large number
of processed foods, including meats,
cheeses, beverages, and bakery products.
"As
a result, depending on individual food
choices, phosphorous intake could be
increased by as much as 1000 mg per day.”
“Although the 0.5 percent was defined as
close to ‘normal,’ the average diet today is
actually closer to the one percent diet and
may actually exceed it,” Dr. Cho noted.
“Therefore, the 0.5 percent intake level is
actually a reduced phosphate diet by today’s
scale.”
Dr. Cho said future studies will help refine
what constitutes a “safe” level of dietary
inorganic phosphate, with recommendations
that will be easily achievable in the
average population.
“The results of this study suggest that
dietary regulation of inorganic phosphates
has a place in lung cancer treatment, and
our eventual goal is to collect sufficient
information to accurately assess the risk of
these phosphates,” he said.
John Heffner, M.D., past president of the
ATS, stated that this line of investigation
in animals addresses the complex
interactions between host factors and the
environment that underlie cancer in man.
“We know that only some patients who smoke
develop lung cancer but the reasons for this
varying risk are unknown. This study now
provides a rationale for funding
case-control studies in humans to determine
the potential role of dietary phosphates in
promoting cancer.”
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