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Vitamin D may help slow breast
cancer - study
New York -
High levels of vitamin D may help slow the progression of
breast cancer, researchers suggested on Tuesday.
In a small study of women with the
illness they found that patients with early breast cancer had higher
levels of the vitamin than those with more advanced disease.
"Vitamin D levels are lower in women
with advanced breast cancer than in early breast cancer," said Dr
Carlo Palmieri, of Imperial College London.
"It lends support to the idea that
vitamin D has a role in the progression of breast cancer," he told
Reuters.
The researchers measured the amount
of vitamin D in blood samples from 279 women with breast cancer. In
204 women, the disease was in its early stages. It was more advanced
in the other 75.
"We know from previous studies that
breast cancer incidence is higher in women who live in higher
latitudes and have less sun exposure," said Palmieri.
Vitamin D, the so-called sunshine
vitamin, is found in fortified milk and dairy products, cod liver oil
and some fatty fish.
The body produces vitamin D in the
skin when it is exposed to sunlight. Laboratory tests have also shown
that vitamin D can stop cancer cells from dividing.
Breast cancer is the most common
cancer in women, with more than a million cases detected worldwide
each year, according to the International Agency for Research on
Cancer (IARC) in Lyon, France. The earlier the cancer is detected and
treated, the greater the chances of survival.
Although the scientists do not know
whether the low levels of vitamin D are a cause or a consequence of
the cancer, their findings and the results of other studies suggest
that low levels of vitamin D may be involved in the progression of
early breast cancer to more advanced stages.
"The next thing in this research is
to try and understand the potential causes and mechanisms underlying
these differences and the precise consequences at a molecular level,"
said Palmieri, who reported the finding in the Journal of Clinical
Pathology.
"We also need to look at the
potential clinical implications of monitoring and maintaining high
circulating vitamin D levels in breast cancer patients," he added in a
statement.
Breast cancer is treated with surgery
and radiotherapy, chemotherapy and hormone treatment, or a combination
of them, depending on the cancer and stage of the illness.
Factors which can increase a woman's
risk of breast cancer include having a mother or close relative with
the disease, inherited mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes, an early
puberty, late menopause and not having any children. --
Reuters Limited
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