o
Flemings Steakhouse
wine pairing guide

Posts Tagged ‘Breast cancer’

Resveratrol May Enhance Anti-Tumor Effects of Rapamycin On Breast Cancer Cells

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

Researchers from Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute have discovered that in laboratory studies resveratrol, the potent anti-oxidant found primarily in red wine, when combined with rapamycin can have a tumor-suppressing effect on breast cancer cells that have developed a resistance to rapamycin alone.  The research was conducted by Charis Eng, MD, Ph.D., Chair of the Genomic Medicine Institute of Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute.

Rapamycin, an experimental immunosuppressant drug used to prevent rejection in organ transplantation, has been considered for the use of anti-tumor activity against breast cancer.  It has been noted that, in a laboratory setting, breast cells can develop a drug resistance to rapamycin alone.  However, the addition of reverstrol seems to mitigate the drug resistance signifying the possible benefits of a dual approach.

Despite the potential for tumor suppression, rapamycin's efficacy with respect to growth inhibition differs markedly among various breast cancer cell lines. Rapamycin, resveratrol, and combinations of these agents inhibited cell growth in a dose-dependent manner. In all three cell lines tested, the presence of low concentrations of resveratrol and rapamycin was sufficient to induce 50 percent growth inhibition.

Questions Continue in Debate Over Risk of Alcohol Consumption and Breast Cancer

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

In recent years, several studies have highlighted the risks of alcohol consumption as related to breast cancer while others have questioned those results.  Now come two additional studies that add fuel to that debate.  One study indicates that drinking is not a risk factor for the most common type of breast cancer, ductal carcinoma, while potentially elevating the risk for the less common form, lobular carcinoma.  However, a second study found that women with a specific genetic risk for breast cancer may not be at elevated risk when consuming wine.

The first study was headed up by Dr. Christopher Li at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Institute in Seattle and has been published online in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.  Researchers categorized women culled from a large study, the Women’s Health Initiative, tracked between 1993 and 2005.  Women were grouped according to the average number of drinks per week.  Results indicated that women who consumed seven or more drinks of alcohol weekly, compared to those who abstained, were at a higher risk of lobular carcinoma, a form that develops in the milk production area of the breast.  In fact, women who consumed one or more drinks daily had almost double the risk.   However, this group did not suffer a significantly higher risk of ductal carcinoma which develops in the milk ducts.  Researchers indicated that additional research is needed to detail the pathways of both types of carcinoma and their response to alcohol.

Moderate Alcohol Consumption May Increase the Risk of Recurrent Breast Cancer

Monday, January 4th, 2010

While the potential benefits of alcoholic spirits consumed in responsible moderation has been well publicized, so too has been the possible link between alcohol intake and the risk of breast cancer.  Now comes a study funded by the National Cancer Institute, through a research division of Kaiser Permanente, that examines a possible association between recurrent breast cancer in survivors and alcohol intake.

Culled from nearly 1900 early breast cancer survivors between the years of 1997 and 2000, 275 women later developed recurrent breast cancer.  Of the 275 women, 232 deaths were recorded.  Researchers then compared the rate of recurrence to alcohol intake and discovered that those subjects consuming more than two drinks of alcohol per day had a 39% increased risk of recurrent breast cancer.  In the subset of post-menopausal women, the risk nearly doubled, according to the statistics.  It should be noted that 90% of the women who consumed alcohol, did so in the form of wine.

Lotus Garden
Callaghan Vineyards
Temco
Dos Cabezas Wineworks

Polls

  • Do you drink more old world or new world wines?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...
Recipes
on the menu live