Effects of Dietary Wheat Bran Fiber on Rectal Epithelial Cell Proliferation in Patients With Research for Colorectal Cancers
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
- Vol. 82 (15) , 1280-1285
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/82.15.1280
Abstract
A preponderance of carcinogenesis studies in rodents and epidemiologic studies in humans suggests a potential role of dietary fiber in the prevention of colorectal cancer. Recently, wheat bran fiber used as a dietary supplement has been shown to decrease the growth of rectal adenomatous polyps in patients with familial poluposis; however, few studies of high-risk human populatins have been attempted to determine the effects of dietary fiber supplementation on markersn of carcinogenesis in the colon or rectum. We have designed a one-arm study to evaluate the effects of dietary supplementation with wheat bran fiber [i.e., 13.5 g/day for 8 wk; after 1 mo, 2 g/day (compliance evaluation period)] on [ 3 H]thy-midine rectal mucosa cell labeling (i.e., percent of epithelial cells incorporating [ 3 H]thymidine into DNA in intact rectal crypt cells over a 90-min exposure as well as in minced rectal biopsy tissue over a 24-hr exposure) in rectal biopsy speciamens. The biopsy specimens were obtained at sigmoidoscopy in 17 compliant patients with a history of resected colon or rectal cancer. We categorized patients as having initaially low or initially high [ 3 H]thymidine-labeling indices (i.e., percent of mucosa cells that incorporate [ 3 H]thymidine into DNA during 1.5-or 24-hour in vitro incubations) by using the median baseline labeling index as a cutoff between high and low values. On the basis of a chi-square test used to identify patients with a statistically significant ( P <. 001) change, six of the eight patients who initially had high 24-hour outgrowth labeling indices showed a significant decrease in the rectal mucosa biopsy specimens obtained after treatment. An over-all 22% decrease was observed in rectal mucosa cell biopsy specimens obtained at study termination ( P <.001). Of the eight patients with initially high total [ 3 H]thymidine-labeling indices in crypt organ culture, four had a significant ( P <.001) decrease from baseline values, one had a significant increase, and three showed no change following the fiber intervention. The wheat bran fiber dietary supplement of 13.5 g/day was well tolerated by this group of older (54—70 yr) patients. Although the [ 3 H]-thymidine labeling index data suggest that the wheat bran fiber supplement can inhibit DNA synthesis and rectal mucosa cell proliferation in high-risk patients, the resulta of this small pilot study should not be overinterpreted vis á vis the potential role of wheat bran fiber as a chemopreventive agent for colorectal cancer. Study results should be confirmed in the setting of a randomized double-blined clinical trial in colorectal cancer patients. Intermediated markers of carcinogenesis should be used as end points. [J Natl Cancer Inst 82: 1280—1285, 1990]Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of wheat bran on bowel function and fecal calcium in older adults.Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 1987
- Abnormal pattern of cell proliferation in the entire colonic mucosa of patients with colon adenoma or cancerGastroenterology, 1987
- INHIBITION OF HUMAN COLONIC EPITHELIAL-CELL PROLIFERATION INVIVO AND INVITRO BY CALCIUM1986
- Effect of Added Dietary Calcium on Colonic Epithelial-Cell Proliferation in Subjects at High Risk for Familial Colonic CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Metabolic epidemiology of colon cancer: fecal mutagens in healthy subjects from rural Kuopio and urban Helsinki, FinlandMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1985
- CLASSIFICATION AND RISK ASSESSMENT OF INDIVIDUALS WITH FAMILIAL POLYPOSIS, GARDNERS-SYNDROME, AND FAMILIAL NON-POLYPOSIS COLON CANCER FROM [H-3]THYMIDINE LABELING PATTERNS IN COLONIC EPITHELIAL-CELLS1984
- TRITIATED-THYMIDINE (PHI-P,PHI-H) LABELING DISTRIBUTION AS A MARKER FOR HEREDITARY PREDISPOSITION TO COLON CANCER1983
- FECAL MUTAGENS IN 2 JAPANESE POPULATIONS WITH DIFFERENT COLON CANCER RISKS1982
- Mutagens in the feces of 3 South-African populations at different levels of risk for colon cancerMutation Research/Environmental Mutagenesis and Related Subjects, 1979
- Metabolic epidemiology of large bowel cancer. Fecal bulk and constituents of high-risk North American and low-risk finnish populationCancer, 1978