| Literature DB >> 23874588 |
Jill M Hamilton-Reeves1, Snigdha Banerjee, Sushanta K Banerjee, Jeffrey M Holzbeierlein, J Brantley Thrasher, Suman Kambhampati, John Keighley, Peter Van Veldhuizen.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We describe the effects of soy isoflavone consumption on prostate specific antigen (PSA), hormone levels, total cholesterol, and apoptosis in men with localized prostate cancer. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23874588 PMCID: PMC3710024 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Participant Flow Diagram.
Baseline Characteristics of Participants.
| Characteristic | Isoflavone Group n = 42 men | Placebo Group n = 44 men |
| Mean age, y (sd) | 62±12 | 62±7 |
| Race, No. (%) | ||
| White | 38 (90) | 31 (70) |
| Black | 3 (7) | 9 (20) |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 1(2) | 4 (9) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 0 | 0 |
| Ethnicity, No. (%) | ||
| Hispanic | 1 (2) | 2 (5) |
| Non-Hispanic | 41 (98) | 42 (95) |
| Clinical Stage, No. (%) | ||
| T1 | 15 (35) | 24 (55) |
| T2 | 27 (64) | 19 (43) |
| Mean baseline PSA, ng/mL (SD) | 9±5 | 8±4 |
| Gleason Score, No. (SD) | 7±0.9 | 7±0.7 |
| Body weight, pds (SD) | 208±40 | 213±41 |
| Height, in (SD) | 70±2 | 70±3 |
| BMI, kg/m2 (SD) | 30±5 | 31±5 |
| Physical Activity | ||
| ≥15 min exercise/day, No. (%) | 8 (19) | 6 (14) |
| <15 min exercise/day, No. (%) | 34 (81) | 37 (86) |
Baseline characteristics were compared using t-tests for continuous variables after checking normality assumptions and Fisher’s Exact test for categorical variables. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant. PSA = prostate-specific antigen; BMI = Body Mass Index.
Clinical stage based on the American Joint Committee on Cancer criteria.
Prostate Specific Antigen, Serum hormones, and Total Cholesterol in men with prostate cancer who consumed isoflavones or placebo for up to 6 weeks.
| Serum marker | Isoflavone Group Mean ± SD, (n) | Placebo Group Mean ± SD, (n) | |
| Prostate Specific Antigen, ng/mL | |||
| Baseline | 9±5 (42) | 8±4 (44) | |
| 1 wk | 9±3 (5) | 6±6 (5) | |
| 2 wk | 8±5 (31) | 8±4 (37) | |
| 3 wk | 8±5 (14) | 5±3 (8) | |
| 4 wk | 8±5 (9) | 7±5 (6) | |
| 5 wk | 6±4 (2) | 10±4(5) | |
| 6 wk | 7±3 (4) | 10±4 (3) | |
| Total Testosterone, ng/dL | |||
| Baseline | 345±135 (34) | 363±150 (37) | |
| 1 wk | 367±216 (4) | 288±170 (4) | |
| 2 wk | 376±152 (26) | 405±173 (34) | |
| 3 wk | 351±96 (11) | 376±192 (6) | |
| 4 wk | 368±142 (9) | 497±270 (5) | |
| 5 wk | 418±0 (1) | 335±44 (5) | |
| 6 wk | 231±51 (4) | 276±98 (3) | |
| Free Testosterone, pg/mL | |||
| Baseline | 48±24 (41) | 43±22 (42) | |
| 1 wk | 47±32 (5) | 40±30 (5) | |
| 2 wk | 56±16 (30) | 51±23 (37) | |
| 3 wk | 42±24 (13) | 47±33 (8) | |
| 4 wk | 38±24 (9) | 73±48 (6) | |
| 5 wk | 24±33 (2) | 46±9 (5) | |
| 6 wk | 51±2 (4) | 44±6 (3) | |
| Total Estrogen, pg/mL | |||
| Baseline | 130±84 (42) | 136±76 (44) | |
| 1 wk | 93±14 (5) | 126±63 (5) | |
| 2 wk | 130±58 (31) | 131±56 (36) | |
| 3 wk | 117±72 (14) | 126±67 (8) | |
| 4 wk | 107±48 (8) | 133±17 (4) | |
| 5 wk | 64±29 (2) | 113±24 (5) | |
| 6 wk | 177±91 (4) | 149±83 (3) | |
| Estradiol, ng/mL | |||
| Baseline | 20±13 (39) | 22±14 (40) | |
| 1 wk | 22±14 (5) | 21±10 (5) | |
| 2 wk | 24±15 (36) | 18±12 (36) | |
| 3 wk | 24±9 (8) | 16±14 (8) | |
| 4 wk | 29±23 (5) | 28±17 (5) | |
| 5 wk | 36±25 (3) | 30±14 (3) | |
| 6 wk | 11±10 (2) | 23±6 (2) | |
| Total Cholesterol, mg/dL | |||
| Baseline | 177±38 (40) | 186±39 (41) | |
| 1 wk | 184±45 (5) | 199±36 (4) | |
| 2 wk | 167±34 (30) | 180±35 (36) | |
| 3 wk | 161±48 (12) | 175±54 (7) | |
| 4 wk | 201±46 (8) | 187±38 (6) | |
| 5 wk | 165±11 (2) | 179±18 (5) | |
| 6 wk | 168±39 (4) | 155±13 (3) | |
Data are means+SD. Analysis of covariance model was used to compare groups adjusted for the baseline value of the outcome. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Every patient had a maximum of 3 observations for each endpoint but the time of observation varied across patients due to the varied scheduling of the patients’ prostate cancer treatments.
Figure 2Cell cycle gene array of the prostate tumor specimen obtained from two patients with prostate cancer, one who consumed isoflavones and one who took the placebo.
The figure shows the ratio of the gene to GAPDH.
Figure 3Apoptosis gene array of the prostate tumor specimen obtained from two patients with prostate cancer, one who consumed isoflavones and one who took the placebo.
The figure shows the ratio of the gene to GAPDH.