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Drug Blocks Lung Cancer in Mice |
Milk thistle drug blocks lung cancer in mice
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Tue Jun 27, 2006
By Martha Kerr
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Silibinin, a drug derived from milk
thistle, destroys lung cancer in mice, investigators at the University of
Colorado, Denver report in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Lead investigator Dr. Rana P. Singh told Reuters Health, "We have been studying
milk thistle components, silymarin and silibinin, to examine their efficacy and
mechanisms against different...cancers for over a decade."
In the current study, Singh's team injected mice with a chemical called urethane
to induce lung cancer. The animals then received diets containing different
doses of silibinin.
"We obtained pure silibinin from Sigma Chemical Co., and silibinin diets were
commercially prepared at room temperature and air dried. We did not use milk
thistle dietary supplements which are available for human consumption," Singh
said.
Mice fed silibinin had fewer large lung tumors than untreated mice. Further
analysis showed that silibinin seemed to reduce the number of blood vessels that
provide nutrients to the tumors, allowing them to grow.
Singh added that further laboratory studies of silibinin for lung cancer are now
being done. "We expect soon after that clinical trials with silibinin in lung
cancer patients will be planned."
For more of the story,
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