Abstract
Colorectal cancer is becoming increasingly common in Asian countries and still
remains the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States.
Efforts to prevent colon cancer have targeted early detection through screening
and chemoprevention. For the last ten years our laboratory has utilized an in
vivo screening assay for the testing of potential cancer preventives for colon
cancer. We have conducted investigations on over 150 compounds including
many with botanical or herbal origins. As part of our program on natural products
we have examined a number of herbal and botanical products in the aberrant
crypt foci (ACF) assay including Korean red ginseng powder, green tea catechins,
curcumin from the Indian culinary spice, tumeric, compounds from garlic
and onion, resveratrol from red grapes, among others. In the ginseng experiments
groups of 10 F344 rats were fed ginseng powder at a dose of 0.5 g/kg or
2 mg/kg for 5 weeks. During weeks 2 and 3 rats were injected with 10 mg/kg
azoxymethane to induce ACF. Controls (n=10) did not receive azoxymethane
(AOM). Rats were killed by CO2 overdose and ACF counted in the rat colon. In
8 week post-initiation experiments ginseng powder inhibited the progression of
established ACF, indicating a cytostatic effect. This may be due to an anti-inflammatory
effect. There is a body of literature that suggests that compounds
in wine, tumeric, and tea inhibit cyclooxygenases, thus reducing prostaglandin-mediated
effects on the colon. As colon tumors have been shown to highly
express COX-2 protein, and given, that many NSAID drugs also suppress COX-1,
it is tempting to speculate that herbal products that inhibit one or both forms of
the COX enzyme will be effective agents for the prevention of cancer in man.