ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Drinking cranberry juice or
taking cranberry extract may enhance the effectiveness of chemotherapy
drugs used to fight ovarian cancer.
Chemotherapy using platinum-based drugs is a mainstay treatment for
ovarian cancer. However, cancer cells tend to develop resistance to
platinum therapy over time, and higher doses of the drugs can cause
unwanted side effects, including nerve damage and kidney failure.
Researchers have tried to find ways to make cells more sensitive to
platinum therapy, and the answer may be in your refrigerator right now.
Researchers demonstrated human ovarian cancer cells resistant to
platinum drugs became up to six-times more sensitized to the drugs after
exposure to cranberry compounds than unexposed cells. The amount of
juice extract given to the cells was the human equivalent of about one
cup of cranberry juice.
Though these early results are promising, some doctors cautioned it is
too soon to recommend all patients stock up on the red juice. "If a
patient of mine saw the study and said, 'I love cranberry juice. Should
I keep on drinking it?' I would say, 'By all means! Drink it.'" Dwight
Im, M.D., co-director of the gynecological oncology center at Mercy
Medical Center in Baltimore, Md., told Ivanhoe. "On the other hand, I
wouldn't go and say you should drink cranberry juice even if you're not
a cranberry juice drinker."
Study researchers said animal studies of the treatment therapy will
begin soon and if successful, cranberry extract could be used as part of
an injectable chemotherapy regimen or as a beverage supplement to be
consumed during chemotherapy.
SOURCE: Ivanhoe interview with Dwight Im, M.D.; American Chemical
Society 234th National Meeting in Boston, Mass., Aug. 19-23, 2007