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Green tea extract can make tumours disappear in weeks

A COMPOUND found in green tea has been shown to shrink cancer tumours, causing almost half to disappear within one month, according to Scottish 
scientists.

Researchers at the universities of Strathclyde and Glasgow said a technique they used to deliver the extract in concentrated doses to the tumours, under laboratory conditions, had caused 40 per cent of them to vanish.

The experiments, on two different types of skin cancer, also resulted in 30 per cent and 20 per cent of them reducing in size.

The tests are thought to be the first time that this type of treatment has made cancerous tumours shrink or vanish.

Known as epigallocatechin gallate (EGCg), the extract is 
understood to have preventative anti-cancer properties.

But previous attempts to reach tumours when delivered by conventional intravenous 
methods have failed 
because they could not send enough of the extract to the 
tumours.

However, researchers devised a new approach which allowed the treatment to be delivered specifically to the tumours 
intravenously. This was done by creating a cell with EGCg and transferrin, a protein that naturally targets and latches on to the surface of cancer cells, applying it to 
tumours.

The tests were done on two types of skin cancer – epidermoid carcinoma which forms like scales on the surface of the skin, and melanoma, which often develops in people who have moles on their skin.

In both studies, 40 per cent of tumours vanished while 30 per cent of tumours in carcinoma cases and 20 per cent in melanoma cases shrank. A further 10 per cent of melanoma tumours were stabilised and remained the same.

The process was found to have no side-effects on other cells or tissue.

Dr Christine Dufès, a senior lecturer at the Strathclyde 
Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, who led the research, said: “These are very encouraging results which we hope could pave the way for new and effective cancer treatments.

“This research could open doors to new treatments for what is still one of the biggest killer diseases in many 
countries.”

Dr Julie Sharp of Cancer 
Research UK, said: “A few studies have shown that extracts from green tea may have some effect on cancer cells in the lab but his has not yet been backed up by research in humans.

“It’s far too soon to say if 
enjoying a cup of green tea has any wider benefits in combating cancer, but we know that a healthy balanced diet can help to reduce the risk.”

The research paper has been published in the journal 
Nanomedicine.


 
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