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Hormonal dietary supplements might promote
Prostate Cancer progression
Newswise — Hormonal components in
over-the-counter dietary supplements may
promote the progression of prostate cancer
and decrease the effectiveness of
anti-cancer drugs, researchers at UT
Southwestern Medical Center have discovered.
The findings, which appear in today’s issue
of Clinical Cancer Research, reaffirm that
patients should inform their doctors about
any herbal or hormonal dietary supplements
they are taking or considering taking.
The researchers also recommend that
documentation of supplement usage become
part of routine health assessments for all
patients, particularly cancer patients.
“Physicians need to ask their patients not
only about the prescription drugs they may
be taking, but – perhaps even more
importantly – about the over-the-counter
drugs and supplements, which may have a
profound impact on certain health
conditions,” said Dr. Claus Roehrborn,
chairman of urology at UT Southwestern and
one of the study’s authors.
The researchers began their investigation
when two patients being seen by UT
Southwestern doctors developed aggressive
prostate cancer within months of starting
daily consumption of the same dietary
supplement.
Both men purchased the same product, one to
develop stronger muscles and enhance sexual
performance, the other to gain muscle.
Dr. Roehrborn, Dr. Shahrokh Shariat, a
resident in urology and the study’s lead
author, and their colleagues analyzed the
supplement, which is not named in the study.
They found that the product’s label listed
ingredients that were not present,
misrepresented the concentrations of the
ingredients present and failed to list all
the steroid hormones contained in the
product.
Hormone analysis revealed that the
supplement contained testosterone and
estradiol, a sex hormone. Researchers then
tested the effect of the product on human
prostate cancer-cell lines.
The product proved to be a more potent
stimulator of cancer-cell growth than
testosterone.
Additionally, attempts to stop the
cancer-cell growth with increasing
concentrations of the anti-cancer drug
bicalutamide proved to be futile.
“Bicalutamide is an oral nonsteroidal
anti-androgen used to treat prostate
cancer,” Dr. Shariat said. “The fact that
this supplement caused the drug to be less
effective is very troubling.”
Based on the clinical data and cell culture
experiments, the researchers filed an
adverse event report with the Food and Drug
Administration.
The government agency in turn issued a
warning letter to the manufacturers, which
led to the removal of the product from the
market.
“Unlike prescription and over-the-counter
drugs, the law does not require nutritional
supplements to undergo pre-market approval
for safety and efficacy,” Dr. Shariat said.
“The current FDA regulatory system provides
little oversight or assurances that dietary
supplements will have predictable
pharmacological effects or even that product
labels provide accurate information for
consumers.”
The researchers say expanded research is
needed to define the mechanism, safety and
efficacy of common herbal and hormone
dietary supplements.
“For most supplements efficacy is not
established in randomized, controlled
trials. What is worse, safety is often
equally poorly established,” said Dr.
Roehrborn, who directs the Sarah M. and
Charles E. Seay Center for Pediatric
Urology.
An estimated 42 percent to 69 percent of
U.S. adults use dietary supplements, at an
estimated out-of-pocket expenditure of about
$34.4 billion, according to published
reports cited in the study. Individuals
often use supplements because they believe
these natural products are safe and
drug-free.
The sale of androgenic steroids is
exponentially increasing. In 2004, U.S.
expenditures on testosterone supplements
were estimated to be $425 million.
“Given that testosterone supplements are in
high demand, there is significant concern
that supplements, in addition to the one we
evaluated, may pose an urgent human health
risk,” Dr. Shariat said.
Researchers from Baylor College of Medicine
in Houston also contributed to the research.