Acetaldehyde, Microbes, and Cancer of the Digestive Tract
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences
- Vol. 40 (2) , 183-208
- https://doi.org/10.1080/713609333
Abstract
Excessive alcohol consumption and heavy smoking are the main risk factors of upper digestive tract cancer in industrialized countries. The association between heavy drinking and cancer appears to he particularly prominent in Asian individuals who have an inherited deficient ability to detoxify the first metabolite of ethanol oxidation, acetaldehyde. Alcohol itself is not carcinogenic. However, according to cell culture and animal experiments acetaldehyde is highly toxic, mutagenic, and carcinogenic. In addition to somatic cells, microbes representing normal human gut flora are also able to produce acetaldehyde from ethanol. After the ingestion of alcoholic beverages, this results in high local acetaldehyde concentrations in the saliva, gastric juice, and the contents of the large intestine. In addition, microbes may produce acetaldehyde endogenously without alcohol administration. This review summarizes the epidemiological, genetic, and biochemical evidence supporting the role of locally produced acetaldehyde in the pathogenesis of digestive tract cancer. Special emphasis is given to those factors that regulate local acetaldehyde concentration in the contents of the gastrointestinal tract. The new evidence presented in this review may open a microbiological approach to the pathogenesis of digestive tract cancer and may have an influence on future preventive strategies.Keywords
This publication has 126 references indexed in Scilit:
- INHIBITION OF BACTERIOCOLONIC PATHWAY FOR ETHANOL OXIDATION BY CIPROFLOXACIN IN RATSLife Sciences, 1997
- Genetic Polymorphism and Activities of Human Colon Alcohol and Aldehyde Dehydrogenases: No Gender and Age DifferencesAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1994
- Alcohol consumption and the etiology of colorectal cancer: A review of the scientific evidence from 1957 to 1991Nutrition and Cancer, 1992
- Alcohol dehydrogenase mediated acetaldehyde production by Helicobacter pylori — a possible mechanism behind gastric injuryLife Sciences, 1992
- Comparative effects of Des Leu Angiotensin I and Angiotensin II on AVP secretion from the hypothalamoneurohypophysis and pituitary of the ratLife Sciences, 1992
- Increased frequency of acetaldehyde-induced sister-chromatic exchanges in human lymphocytes treated with an aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitorMutation Research Letters, 1991
- Metabolism of ethanol in vitro produces a compound which induces sister-chromatid exchanges in human peripheral lymphocytes in vitro: Acetaldehyde not ethanol is mutagenicMutation Research Letters, 1986
- Oesophageal cancer in non‐smoking drinkers and in non‐drinking smokersInternational Journal of Cancer, 1983
- Respiratory tract tumours in hamsters exposed to acetaldehyde vapour alone or simultaneously to benzo(a)pyrene or diethylnitrosamineEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1982
- Protection against Acetaldehyde Toxicity in the rat byl-cysteine, thiamin andl-2-Methylthiazolidine-4-carboxylic acidInflammation Research, 1974