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S65
Early development of cancer chemoprevention clinical
trials: studies of dietary calcium as a chemopreventive
agent for human subjects
Martin Lipkin
Early cancer
chemoprevention clinical trials in human subjects had to
be carried out with large numbers of subjects studied
for long durations, measuring cancer as an end point.
However new findings on abnormal epithelial cell growth
and development during the multistage evolution of
colonic tumors made it possible to carry out
chemoprevention clinical trials in several stages, with
fewer subjects studied for shorter durations, thus
enabling investigators to analyze increasing numbers of
chemopreventive agents and nutritional regimens in
clinical trials. Supplemental dietary calcium was the
first candidate chemopreventive agent studied in this
multistage approach in human subjects, as a putative
agent for colon cancer prevention. Early- and late-stage
intermediate biomarker studies in humans have strongly
suggested utility for supplemental dietary calcium to
inhibit the development of benign and subsequent
malignant colonic neoplasms. Preclinical experimental
studies have further demonstrated the ability of
increased dietary calcium to inhibit the evolution of
colonic tumors when they were induced by targeted
mutations, dietary factors, and particularly when given
over a long duration of lifespan.
Key words:
Calcium, chemoprevention, colon, biomarkers, clinical
trials
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