Traditional Chinese Herb To Treat Cancer - Asian Scientist Magazine

2022-09-16 22:35:51 By : Ms. Livia Lin

Scientists have found that a common herb used in traditional Chinese medicine may help to make cancer treatment more effective.

Asian Scientist (Mar. 4, 2014) – The bark of the Amur cork tree (Phellodendron amurense) is a major source of huáng bò (黄柏), one of the 50 fundamental herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine. It has been used for centuries as a painkiller and anti-inflammation agent. Now scientists have shown that it may help make cancer treatment more effective.

Researcher A. Pratap Kumar was already exploring the cork tree extract’s promise in treating prostate cancer when his team found that deadly pancreatic cancers share some similar development pathways with prostate tumors.

In a paper published in the journal Clinical Cancer Research, the researchers show that the extract blocks those pathways and inhibits the scarring that thwarts anti-cancer drugs.

“Fibrosis is a process of uncontrolled scarring around the tumor gland,” said Dr. Kumar, the study’s principal investigator. “Once you have fibrotic tissue, the drugs cannot get into the cancer.”

Liver and kidney tumors also develop fibrosis and the resulting resistance to drugs, he said, and there are no drugs currently targeting that pathway in those cancers.

The two pathways, or proteins, that contribute to fibrosis in those tumors also encourage Cox-2, an enzyme that causes inflammation, and the cork tree extract appears to suppress that as well.

According to Dr Kumar, the complex interrelationship of these substances is “the million-dollar question” and solving that question is one of the next steps in his research.

The potential of natural substances to treat and cure disease has great appeal, but the advantage of cork tree extract, available as a dietary supplement in capsule form, is that it already has been established as safe for use in patients.

In a promising prostate cancer clinical study of 24 patients that Dr. Kumar helped spearhead, all the patients tolerated the treatment well, he said. Now researchers are analyzing the results, he said, and with more funding they plan to expand the study to a much larger group of patients.

The dietary supplement is marketed as Nexrutine by Next Pharmaceuticals in California, which provided a supply of the compound for the studies.

The article can be found at: Gong J et al. (2014) Combined Targeting Of STAT3/NF-κB/COX-2/EP4 For Effective Management Of Pancreatic Cancer.

Source: University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; Photo: romana klee/Flickr/CC. Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

#Amur cork tree #Cancer #China #Fibrosis #Traditional Chinese Medicine

Asian Scientist Magazine is an award-winning science and technology magazine that highlights R&D news stories from Asia to a global audience. The magazine is published by Singapore-headquartered Wildtype Media Group.

Asian Scientist Magazine is an award-winning science and technology magazine that highlights R&D news stories from Asia to a global audience. The magazine is published by Singapore-headquartered Wildtype Media Group.

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