Abstract
The failure to improve the five-year survival rate of cancer patients, from one in
three in the 1960s to one in two in the 1970s, stimulated awareness of the importance
of primary prevention of cancer. Korean investigators carried out extensive
long-term anticarcinogenicity experiments with 2000 newborn mice to investigate
whether Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer inhibited carcinogenesis induced by several
chemical carcinogens in 1978. There was a 22% decrease (p<0.05) in the incidence
of urethane induced lung adenoma by the combined use of red ginseng
extract. In the group sacrificed at 56 weeks after the treatment with aflatoxin B1,
the incidence of hepatoma significantly decreased to 75% by the addition of red
ginseng extract (p<0.05). The result showed that natural products can provide
hope for human cancer prevention. By the newly established '9 week medium-term
anticarcinogenicity test model of lung tumors in mice' (Yun's model), we
confirmed significant anticarcinogenic effects of powders and extracts of the 6-
yr-old dried fresh ginseng, 5- and 6-yr old white ginsengs, and 4-, 5-, and 6-yr
old red ginseng. We also demonstrated that the anticarcinogencity of ginseng
was more prominent in aged or heat treated extracts of ginseng and red ginseng
made by steaming. To investigate the active components for cancer prevention,
several fractions of 6-yr old fresh ginseng and red ginseng, four semi-synthetic
ginsenoside Rh1, Rh2, Rg3 and Rg5, major saponin components in red ginseng,
were prepared. Among the ginsenosides, Rg3 and Rg5 showed statistically significant
reduction of lung tumor incidence and Rh2 had a tendency of decreasing
the incidence. Ginsenoside Rg3, Rg5 and Rh2 were found to be active anticarcinogenic
compounds. Rg3, Rg5 and Rh2 are active components in red ginseng,
and they prevent cancer either singularly or synergistically.