Antioxidants in cancer therapy; their actions and interactions with oncologic therapies
- PMID: 10559547
Antioxidants in cancer therapy; their actions and interactions with oncologic therapies
Abstract
There is a concern that antioxidants might reduce oxidizing free radicals created by radiotherapy and some forms of chemotherapy, and thereby decrease the effectiveness of the therapy. The question has arisen whether concurrent administration of oral antioxidants is contraindicated during cancer therapeutics. Evidence reviewed here demonstrates exogenous antioxidants alone produce beneficial effects in various cancers, and except for a few specific cases, animal and human studies demonstrate no reduction of efficacy of chemotherapy or radiation when given with antioxidants. In fact, considerable data exists showing increased effectiveness of many cancer therapeutic agents, as well as a decrease in adverse effects, when given concurrently with antioxidants.
Comment in
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Should antioxidants be used in cancer therapy?Altern Med Rev. 1999 Oct;4(5):303. Altern Med Rev. 1999. PMID: 10559546 No abstract available.
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