Tea reduces ovarian cancer risk
TEA: Women who drink at least two cups of tea a day can reduce their
risk of developing ovarian cancer by almost 50%, Swedish researchers
report on HealthDay News last December said.
There has been some experimental evidence that green and black tea
might lower the risk of some cancers, but this is one of the few studies
that has looked at the ability of tea to reduce the risk of ovarian
cancer, the researchers noted.
The report appears in the December 16 issue of the Archives of
Internal Medicine. In their study, Susanna C. Larsson and Alicja Wolk,
of the National Institute of Environmental Medicine at the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm, looked at 61,057 women who were 40 to 76 years
old. The women all participated in a population-based study called the
Swedish Mammography Cohort. At the beginning of the study, 68% of the
participants said they drank tea (mainly black tea) at least once a
month.
During 15 years of follow-up 301 women were diagnosed with , ovarian
cancer. "We found a lower risk of ovarian cancer associated with greater
tea consumption," Larsson said. Larsson and Wolk found that women who
drank at least two cups of tea a day reduced their risk of developing
ovarian cancer by 46% 'Each additional cup of tea per day was associated
with an 18% lower risk of ovarian cancer," the authors reported. In
addition, women who drank one cup a day cut their risk by 24%, and those
who even drank less than one cup of tea a day reduced their risk by 18%
compared with non-tea drinkers.
"The advice to women is to increase the consumption of tea," Larsson
said. "There are no harmful effects of tea." One expert sees this study
as reason to look for the components in tea that may be protecting women
from ovarian cancer.
"This manuscript continues to increase our optimism that lifestyle
interventions can be successful in cancer prevention," said Dr. Robert
Morgan Jr., section head of medical gynecologic oncology at City of Hope
Cancer Center in Duarte, Calif.
These interventions are particularly important in ovarian cancer
because, while ovarian cancer diagnosed in early stage disease is very
curable, screening interventions have been only minimally effective in
this disease due to the non-specificity of symptoms of early ovarian
cancer, as well as the location of the ovaries deep in the pelvis,
making them difficult to examine directly," Morgan said. Because of
this, prevention strategies are very important, Morgan added.
"Much data has recently been published suggesting that lifestyle
changes, including exercise and stations, may lead to decreased
incidences of new diagnoses of cancer or cancer recurrences.
This manuscript suggests that there are other natural products which
may be capable of the same phenomenon," he said. Since the reasons tea
may be protective are not known, Morgan thinks this study could lead
researchers back to the lab to uncover the mechanisms at work. |