Green Tea blocks benefits Of Cancer Drug
Newswise — Contrary to popular assumptions about the health
benefits of green tea, researchers at the
University of Southern California (USC) have
found that the widely used supplement
renders a cancer drug used to treat multiple
myeloma and mantle cell lymphoma completely
ineffective in treating cancer.
The study, which found that a component of green tea
extract (GTE) called EGCG destroys any
anticancer activity of the drug Velcade in
tumor-bearing mice, will be published in a
future print edition of the journal, Blood.
It is now available online at the journal’s pre-publication
First Edition website.
“Our finding that GTE or EGCG blocked the therapeutic
action of Velcade was completely
unexpected,” says lead author Axel H.
Schönthal, PhD, associate professor in the
Department of Microbiology and Immunology at
the Keck School of Medicine of USC.
“Our hypothesis was that GTE or EGCG would enhance the
anti-tumor effects of Velcade, and that a
combination of GTE with Velcade (or EGCG
with Velcade) would turn out to be a
superior cancer treatment as compared to
treatment with Velcade alone.”
Herbal remedies, including green tea, have become a popular
remedy for cancer patients dealing with side
effects of chemotherapy.
However, these supplements are unregulated and, for most,
their beneficial and/or detrimental effects
have not been qualified through research.
Using preclinical models and tumor-bearing mice, the
researchers found that the unusually
effective blockage of Velcade’s therapeutic
activity was based on the chemical
interaction between molecules.
The EGCG molecule and the Velcade molecule were able to
form chemical bonds, meaning that the
Velcade molecule could no longer bind to its
intended target inside the tumor cells.
Clinical trials to verify these results in humans would be
highly unethical to conduct, because of the
predictably unfavorable outcome.
Nevertheless, the researchers expect the results of the
study to be applicable to cancer patients.
“The most immediate conclusion from our study is the strong
advice that patients undergoing cancer
therapy with Velcade must avoid green tea,
and in particular all of its concentrated
products that are freely available from
health food stores,” says Schönthal.
“It is important to spread this message to health care
providers who administer Velcade to
patients.”
Schönthal points out that for patients on Velcade,
supplementing with green tea products should
reduce the burden of harsh side
effects—which might be attractive to the
patient, but comes at a high cost.
“Essentially, in addition to not being able to attack tumor
cells, Velcade would be unable to cause side
effects either,” he says.
“As a result, the patient would feel a lot better and
conclude that the consumption of GTE helped
cope with side effects—while in reality,
Velcade simply wasn’t active in the first
place.”
The research findings are part of a larger project run by
the team called “Yin-Yang Properties of
Green Tea Extract in Combination Cancer
Chemotherapy: From Encouragingly Beneficial
to Dangerously Detrimental.”
“Obviously, the combination of GTE or EGCG with Velcade is
an example of ‘dangerously detrimental,’
”Schönthal says.
“But we are also studying another well-established
chemotherapeutic drug, where the inclusion
of EGCG appears to yield an ‘encouragingly
beneficial’ outcome, which is more in line
with our original expectation that GTE
should be beneficial, not detrimental.”
The study was funded by the Multiple Myeloma Research
Foundation.