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Clinical Trials |
Department of Dermatology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106
Cancer
chemopreventive effects of polyphenols from green tea (GTP) in mouse
models of photocarcinogenesis are established. The present study is
extended from mouse model to human system in vivo to
determine the effect of topical application of GTP to human individuals
against UV light-induced DNA damage in the form of cyclobutane
pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) in the skin. UVB-induced CPDs were detected by
immunohistochemical technique using monoclonal antibodies to thymine
dimers. With the gradual increase in UVB dose, both erythema response
and CPD formation in the skin was increased. GTP treatment inhibited
both UVB-induced erythema response as well as CPD formation. Topical
treatment with GTP (
1 mg/cm2 of skin area) 20 min before
human buttock skin (sun-protected site) exposure to UVB inhibited CPD
formation in epidermis by 81, 70, 60, and 60% at 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, and
4.0 minimal erythema dose of UV exposure, respectively. Treatment of
human skin with varying doses of GTP (14 mg/2.5 cm2 of
skin area) before a single dose of UVB exposure (4.0 minimal erythema
dose) decreased dose dependently the formation of UVB-induced
CPDs in both epidermis and dermis. The inhibition of UVB-induced CPDs
by GTP treatment may be, at least in part, responsible for the
inhibition of photocarcinogenesis. Our data suggest that GTP may be
used as a novel chemopreventive candidate and possible strategy to
reduce UV-induced skin cancer risk in the human population.
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