Traditional Chinese Medicinal Herbs May Help Women With Breast Cancer
Main Category: Breast CancerAlso Included In: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine; Immune System / Vaccines; Women's Health / Gynecology
Article Date: 21 Apr 2007 - 23:00 PDT
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Using Chinese herbs either alone or in conjunction with chemotherapy may help protect a breast cancer patient's bone marrow and immune system, as well as improving the woman's overall quality of life.
Sixty per cent of women undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer experience a range of significant short term side effects. These include nausea, vomiting and fatigue, as well as inflammation of the gut lining, decreased numbers of red and white blood cells and decreased numbers of blood platelets.
Chinese medicinal herbs include mixtures of herbal compounds or extracts from herbs, and they are prescribed to counteract the side effects of chemotherapy. This Cochrane Systematic Review set out to see if there is conventional evidence indicating that these medicines are safe and whether there is evidence that the medicines are effective.
The researchers identified seven randomised studies involving 542 patients with breast cancer. By analysing these data, the researchers concluded that there was no evidence that the Chinese medicinal herbal treatment caused harm, and some evidence that it might reduce side effects.
"Further trials are needed before the effects of traditional Chinese medicines for people with breast cancer can be evaluated with any real confidence," says Assistant Professor Jing Li, who works at the Chinese Cochrane Centre in Chengdu, China.
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Contact: Jennifer Beal
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Visit our breast cancer section for the latest news on this subject.
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Chinese Herbs To The Rescue?
posted by Gregory D. Pawelski on 21 Aug 2007 at 7:02 pmAccording to a study recently published in the Annals of Oncology, treatment with Chinese herbal medicine may significantly reduce nausea associated with chemotherapy. Researchers from Hong Kong, China, and the University of Birmingham in England conducted a clinical study to evaluate the potential effects of Chinese herbal medicine among patients with early-stage breast or colon cancer who were treated with chemotherapy. Patient outcomes were evaluated according to NCI Common Toxicity Criteria Version 2.
Boosting the drug sensitivity of tumor cells might make it possible to give lower doses of a chemotherapy agent while still achieving an effective response and minimizing side effects. Specifically enhancing the sensitivity of cancer cells to killing by chemotherapy drugs has been a focal point of a number of research scientists.
There have been occasions when an ovarian cancer patient would go to a Chinese herbalist for treatment with some Chinese herbal medicines. They would have a mushy, mixed response, some softening of the tumors, with progression intra-abdominally. Later biopsied masses were found to be quite sensitive to some of the very drugs that were unsuccessful in the first place. Refractory ovarian cancers are generally very refractory. A short time later, complete response. No tumor left in a patient who'd previously had a massive tumor burden and no good prior reponse to anything. Now, the herbal medicine probably didn't do all that much by itself, but what it seemed to do was to chemosensitize the tumor.
While some believe that benefits may seem questionable, the herbal concoctions don't appear to do harm.
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