A new study says that people who are already suffering from prostate cancer must avoid selenium as it worsens their condition.
A new study says that people who are already suffering from prostate cancer must avoid selenium as it worsens their condition.
Researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute the University of California, San Francisco, have observed a higher risk of more-aggressive prostate cancer in men with SOD2 genetic variant, found in about 75 percent of the prostate cancer patients in the study.In such men, having a high level of selenium in the blood was linked with a two-fold greater risk of poorer outcomes than men with the lowest amounts of selenium.
On the other hand, the 25 percent of men with a different variant of the same gene, and who had high selenium levels, were at 40 percent lower risk of aggressive disease.
The variants are slightly different forms of a gene that instructs cells to make manganese superoxide dismutase (SOD2)-an enzyme that protects the body against harmful oxygen compounds.
Senior author Dr. Philip Kantoff, director of Dana-Farber's Lank Center for Genitourinary Oncology, says that the findings of the study suggest that for those who already have prostate cancer, it may be a bad thing to take selenium.
The unexpected results are the first to raise concern about this potentially harmful consequence of taking supplemental selenium.
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The new study reveals the strong interaction between selenium and SOD2 to influence the biology of prostate cancer-a finding that has earlier been shown.
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Selenium is a mineral found widely in rocks and dirt and small amounts of selenium are essential for health.
The study has been published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Source-ANI
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