Date: 11/30/01
For More Information Contact:
Michelle Brandt
Stanford University Medical Center
Email Address: mbrandt@stanford.edu
Telephone: 650/723-0272
Stanford Researcher Shows Selenium May Help Prevent Prostate Cancer
STANFORD,
Calif. -- Men with low blood levels of selenium -- a trace element supplied in
certain foods and supplements -- are four to five times more likely to contract
prostate cancer, according to a federally sponsored study published by a
Stanford University urologist and colleagues.
James D. Brooks, MD, lead author of a paper in the Dec. 1 issue of the Journal
of Urology, said the research confirmed that higher blood levels of selenium
were associated with lower risks of prostate cancer.
"Perhaps the most interesting finding of this study was that blood
selenium levels decreased with age -- a fact not previously known. Furthermore,
this study showed there was a direct connection between selenium and prostate
cancer -- older men with higher levels of selenium were at lower risk."
The study suggests that eating more selenium-rich foods, such as Brazil nuts
and tuna, or taking a dietary supplement, may reduce the risk of prostate
cancer. Brooks said further study is needed to determine if supplements will
actually raise selenium levels in the blood.
Nevertheless, the researchers concluded that the results support the hypothesis
that supplemental selenium may reduce the risk of prostate cancer. Because
selenium in blood decreases with patient age, supplementation may be beneficial
to older men.
A large study is now under way at Stanford and other major medical centers to
test whether supplements will reduce prostate cancer rates. (Healthy men over
age 55 may volunteer or receive details about the study at Stanford and other
sites by calling the National Cancer Institute information line,
1-800-4-CANCER.) Brooks' study included 52 men with prostate cancer and 96 men
without the disease. The median age was just under 69. The men's health histories
and medical risks have been tracked for many years as part of the federally
sponsored Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging.
Brooks, an assistant professor of urology at Stanford, was joined in the study
by scientists at the Laboratory of Clinical Investigation of the National
Institute on Aging, and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The
project was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Aging.
Prostate cancer is the No. 1 form of cancer affecting men, and a leading cause
of cancer deaths among men, according to the American Cancer Society.
Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and
patient care at its three institutions -- Stanford University School of
Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's
Hospital. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical
center's Office of News and Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu. CONTACT:
Stanford University Medical Center
Michelle Brandt,
650/723-0272 or 723-6911 (Media)
mbrandt@stanford.edu Sheila Foster,
650/723-3900 or 723-6911 (Broadcast Media)
safoster@stanford.edu