Prevention is always the first line of defense
These studies along with others emphasize the importance of
preventing prostate cancer. It's better to prevent it in
the first place than to get it and have to treat it. As a medical
oncologist, I don't have a lot of therapies available to
treat prostate cancer. Unlike treatment of breast cancer, where
many types of drugs are available, we only have three or four
chemotherapy treatments for prostate cancer. So it's clearly
better to prevent it.
Next to skin cancer, prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer in U.S. men.
These studies give doctors clearer information about how
to accomplish this. Prostate cancer is a good choice for a prevention
trial because of its incidence, prevalence and disease-related
mortality. It is a good candidate for a preventive strategy for
two reasons:
- Men rarely get prostate cancer before the age of 50; and
- It usually is a slow developing cancer.
Treatment options
In prostate cancer, we have
basically three treatments to offer:
- Do nothing. Older men sometimes choose this option if
their age is advanced and the cancer is slow growing. Many
times, a man will die of other causes before the cancer takes
its toll.
- Surgical removal of the prostate
- Radiationeither external beam or radioactive implants
Hormone therapy may also be used to supplement these therapies.
Prostate cancer common
Next to skin cancer,
prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer in U.S. men.
This year alone, there will be an estimated 232,000 new cases
of prostate cancer and more than 30,000 U.S. deaths. That means
approximately one in six U.S. men, or 17.8 percent, will develop
prostate cancer during his lifetime.
We simply don't have
a good cure rate. All men are at risk, but age 55 or older, being
African-American or having a first-degree relative with the disease
increases one's
risk. More than 92 percent of cases affect men age 55 and older.
Selenium and vitamin E are thought to help prevent cells from changing, the first step in stopping cancer.
Selenium, vitamin E fight cell damage
Selenium and vitamin
E are thought to help prevent cells from changing, the first step
in stopping cancer. When the DNA in cells is attacked on a number of
frontsby
air pollution, chemicals, poor diet, radiation and environmental factorsnormal
cells can change into cancer cells. We have a better understanding
of why some cancers start to grow. In some leukemias, for example,
the trigger is a fusion of two chromosomes.
In prostate cancer,
we don't know why it starts. In many
men, the prostate will grow to a certain size and stop. In others,
it might grow uncontrollably. Researchers are trying to figure
out what causes the lack of control or cancerous growth.
Antioxidants
like vitamin E, beta carotene and selenium have been studied for
their role in preventing cancer. While the results of this SELECT
study aren't
in yet, it looks promising. Beta carotene, however, wasn't shown
to be helpful in earlier studies.
It is generally thought that
selenium and vitamin E stop the chemical reaction that occurs
when cells are attacked. Oxygen in the body can create damaging by-products,
called free radicals, during normal cellular metabolism. Free radicals
can cause cell damage, leading to cancer, heart disease and a weakened
immune system. Antioxidants counteract free radicals, binding with
them before they cause damage.
Antioxidants found in food
Selenium, a nonmetallic trace
element, comes from food, especially rice, wheat, seafood, meat and
Brazil nuts. Vitamin E also comes from food, especially vegetables, vegetable
oils, nuts and egg yolks
Finasteride also found helpful
In the Prostate Cancer
Prevention Trial (PCPT), finasteride was used to see if it could curtail
the hormone that would make the prostate grow. Finasteride, a type of hormonal
therapy, prevents production of certain male hormones.
I wouldn’t start taking these antioxidants without first discussing it with your doctor.
This study showed that finasteride can prevent prostate cancer.
One caveat, howeverwhile men taking finasteride got fewer
instances of prostate cancer, when they did get prostate cancer,
their form of the disease was more likely to be more aggressive.
Talk to your doctor first
Going forward, men should be aware
of the options available to them and talk to their primary care
provider about using antioxidants to prevent prostate cancer. I
wouldn't start taking these
antioxidants without first discussing it with your doctor.
All the evidence isn't in yet, but the future looks promising
for use of antioxidants and finasteride in prevention of prostate
cancer. It's an area of medicine where we'll only improve
in the next few years.
Hari Deshpande, MD, is an attending oncologist at Yale-New
Haven Hospital, a member of the Yale Cancer Center and
assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine.