Doctors have known that low levels of Vitamin D are linked to certain
kinds of cancers as well as to diabetes and asthma, but new research
also shows that the vitamin can kill human cancer cells.
The results fall short of an immediate cancer cure, but they are
encouraging, medical professionals say.
JoEllen Welsh, a researcher with the State University of New York
at Albany, has studied the effects of vitamin D for 25 years.
Part of her research involves taking human breast cancer cells
and treating them with a potent form of vitamin D. Within a few
days, half the cancer cells shriveled up and died. Welsh
said the vitamin has the same effect as a drug used for breast cancer
treatment.
"What happens is that vitamin D enters the cells and triggers
the cell death process," she told "Good Morning America."
"It's similar to what we see when we treat cells with Tamoxifen,"
a drug used to treat breast cancer.
Tumors in Mice Disappear
The vitamin's effects were even more dramatic on breast cancer
cells injected into mice.
After several weeks of treatment, the cancer tumors in the mice
shrank by an average of more than 50 percent. Some tumors disappeared.
Similar results have been achieved on colon and prostate cancer
tumors in mice.
People should take care not to read too much into laboratory studies,
said Dr. Richard Besser, ABC News' senior health and medical editor.
Positive effects in a petri dish or in rats may not necessarily
mean similar results in humans, he said.
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