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Selenium Lowers Incidence of Lung, Colorectal, and Prostate CancersA 10-year cancer prevention trial suggests that dietary supplements of the trace element selenium may significantly lower the incidence of prostate, colorectal, and lung cancers in people with a history of skin cancer. The supplements did not, however, affect the incidence of basal or squamous cell cancers of the skin, the original hypothesis of the study. The results are published in the Dec. 25 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The study is titled: "Effects of Selenium Supplementation for Cancer Prevention in Patients with Carcinoma of the Skin." The authors are Larry C. Clark, Gerald. F Combs Jr., Bruce W. Turnbull, Elizabeth H. Slate, Daniel K. Chalker, James Chow, Loretta S. Davis, Renee A. Glover, Gloria F. Graharn, Earl G. Gross, Arnon Krongrad, Jack Lesher, H. Kim Park, Beverly B. Sanders Jr., Cameron L. Smith, J. Richard Taylor. The study began in l983 and included a total of 1,312 skin cancer patients with a mean age of 63 seen at seven dermatology clinics in the eastern United States. At that time, the primary purpose of the study was to see if dietary supplements of selenium could lower the incidence of basal cell or squamous cell skin cancers. In 1990, secondary end points, including incidence of the most commonly occurring cancers, lung, prostate, and colorectal were added. "The results of this study are exciting because they show the cancer prevention potential of a nutritional supplement to a normal diet," said Larry C. Clark, Ph.D., MPH, associate professor of epidemiology at the Arizona Cancer Center in Tucson, Ariz., and principal investigator of the study. "The study needs to be repeated in other populations before a public health recommendation can be made for selenium supplementation." Patients in the double-blinded (neither patients nor doctors knew who was receiving the intervention), randomized study took a tablet containing 200 micrograms (ug) of selenium as brewer's yeast, or placebo, daily for 4.5 years and were followed for an additional 6.4 years. Three-quarters of the patients were men. The trial ended in January 1996, two years before the planned end of the trial. American diets generally include enough grain, meat, and fish, the primary sources of selenium, to meet the recommended dietary allowance (RDA), 70 ug/day for men and 55 ug/day for women. (Although the EPA established a reference dose, 350 ug/day, as a measure of the maximum safe intake, the human toxicity levels for selenium have not been definitely established.) The study population, however, was from a region of the eastern United States with relatively low selenium levels in soils and crops, and before treatment had a mean plasma selenium concentration in the lower range of the U.S. levels. The supplements increased the plasma concentration by 67 percent and the average daily intakes by 3-fold. The higher plasma concentrations were reached within six to nine months of supplementation and were maintained throughout the trial, although a small decline was seen over the course of the trial. The results of the study showed that total cancer incidence was significantly lower in the selenium group than in the placebo group (77 cases versus 119), as was the incidence of some site-specific cancers: the selenium group had fewer prostate cancers (13 versus 35), fewer colorectal cancers (8 versus 19), and fewer lung cancers (17 versus 31). These differences were statistically significant. The results also showed that over-all mortality was 17 percent less in the selenium versus the control group (108 versus 129) with this difference largely due to a 50 percent reduction in cancer deaths (29 versus 57). Lung cancer deaths were lower in the selenium-treatment group than in the placebo (12 versus 26). The number of deaths for other cancers were insufficient for meaningful statistical analysis. There was no significant difference between the two treatment groups for other causes of death. Peter Greenwald, M.D., director of the National Cancer Institutes Division of Cancer Prevention and Control commented, "These results are interesting for several reasons. First, there was no detectable increase in adverse effects from the supplementation which is very important to know for future trials. Secondly, beneficial effects were seen for three major cancers." Selenium soil levels were first associated inversely with cancer mortality in the late 1960s. Similar results were found in prospective studies which measured selenium status by several methods; soil, blood, nails, hair. Some studies have also found inverse associations with the incidence of cancers of the lung, colon, bladder, rectum, breast, pancreas, and ovary. However, several studies have shown no association between selenium status and cancer and a few have shown a direct association -- cancer risk increased with selenium status. In animals, selenium administration has been shown to have antitumor activity, but at levels several times greater than the nutritional needs. Likewise, in tissue culture experiments, supplementation of cultured tumor cells with selenium at much higher doses than the cells normally require, has been shown to inhibit tumor growth and stimulate apoptosis, programmed cell death. Two additional human intervention trials took place in Linxian, China from l985-1991. In one trial, a daily supplement containing 50 ug selenium plus three other minerals and vitamins, had no effect on the high incidence of esophageal cancer or total cancer incidence or mortality. The second and largest trial showed a significant reduction in stomach cancer incidence (16 percent) and stomach cancer mortality (21 percent) using a daily mixture of antioxidants -- one component of which was selenium. The current study is the first double-blinded cancer prevention trial to test whether a nutritional supplement of selenium alone can reduce cancer risk. Participating dermatology clinics were located in Augusta, Ga; Macon, Ga; Columbia, S.C.; Miami, Fla; Wilson, N.C.; Greenville, N.C.; and Newington, Conn. Greenwald commented on the possibility of future prevention trials. "This study highlights the value of clinical trials in cancer prevention. The interesting observation of a possible benefit of selenium needs to be assessed in a larger, more definitive trial." National Cancer Institute Information Resources
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