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Curcumin in cancer management: recent results of analogue design and clinical studies and desirable future research.

William P Steward, Andreas J Gescher
Review Molecular nutrition & food research 2008 67 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Review
Population
None
Intervention
Curcumin in cancer management: recent results of analogue design and clinical studies and desirable future research. None
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
Curcumin in cancer management: recent results of analogue design and clinical st
Effect Direction
Mixed
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

The ability of the curry constituent curcumin to delay the onset of cancer has been the topic of extensive research for many years. Abundant literature is devoted to mechanisms by which curcumin may mediate this activity. These insights have prompted investigations in which curcumin as lead molecule serves as a scaffold for synthetic chemical attempts to optimize pharmacological potency. Among the published analogues with notable efficacy are dimethylcurcumin, 1,5-bis(3-pyridyl)-1,4-pentadien-3-one and 3,5-bis-(2-fluorobenzylidene)-piperidinium-4-one acetate. Results of a small number of clinical pilot studies conducted with curcumin at doses of up to 12 g suggest tentatively that it is safe in humans. Prevention of adenoma recurrence constitutes a clinical paradigm worthy of further investigation for curcumin. Future clinical study should include measurement of mechanism-based pharmacodynamic parameters.

TL;DR

Results of a small number of clinical pilot studies conducted with curcumin at doses of up to 12 g suggest tentatively that it is safe in humans, and Prevention of adenoma recurrence constitutes a clinical paradigm worthy of further investigation forCurcumin.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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