Tea enlisted to combat skin cancer

Tea could soon be more than just a drink. Compounds of black and green tea could be used in a lotion to ward off skin cancer, new research indicates.

Tea, the cup that tones up the immune system, could soon be more than just a drink. Compounds of black and green tea could be used in a lotion to ward off skin cancer, new research indicates.

A team from the University of Minnesota in Austin told the American Chemical Society in New York yesterday that tea contains chemicals that block formation of non-melanoma skin tumours.

Sunblock prevents the skin from absorbing dangerous ultraviolet radiation from the sun. But the polyphenols in tea get to work after the skin has been exposed to excessive sunlight.

The incidence of skin cancer in Britain and northern Europe has been rising.

Researchers have linked tea with protection against lung cancer, and a team at Harvard earlier this year reported that the brew of antioxidants and other chemicals in tea seemed to stimulate the human immune system far more effectively than coffee.

But the Minnesota team went a step further: they watched the brew of polyphenols block an enzyme called JNK-2, which seems to play a key role in the development of tumours. Levels of JNK-2 increase after the skin is exposed to sunlight, and stay high in those who have had too much sun.

"Drinking tea may help, but you'd have to drink a large amount to accumulate in the skin, perhaps as many as 10 cups a day," said Zigang Dong, who led the research. "It's easier to concentrate it in a cream form, and probably more effective."

Contributor

Tim Radford

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Customised cells combat skin cancer

Scientists have created customised blood cells that can destroy deadly tumours. The researchers used cells, hand-picked from a patient's own blood supply and grown in laboratories, to kill off malignant skin cancers.

Robin McKie, science editor

23, Feb, 2003 @9:28 AM

Gene project yields skin cancer breakthrough

Researchers have discovered the one in 10bn genetic mutation which causes the death of hundreds of British victims of the harshest form of skin cancer, malignant melanoma.

James Meek, science correspondent

10, Jun, 2002 @8:58 AM

Article image
More foreign holidays will mean more skin cancer, scientists predict
A 78% increase in non-melanoma skin cancer may see the cost to the NHS of treating the disease rise to £465m a year by 2025

Denis Campbell Health policy editor

08, Dec, 2016 @7:29 PM

Article image
Adding caffeine to sunscreen could guard against skin cancer

Caffeine may help protect against some skin cancers by promoting the destruction of cells damaged by sunlight

Alok Jha, science correspondent

15, Aug, 2011 @7:00 PM

Protein predictor for cancer

Scientists may have found a better way to predict long-term prospects of survival for breast cancer patients after they have undergone surgery.

James Meikle

04, Dec, 2003 @11:34 AM

Article image
Common human skin bacteria could protect against cancer, say researchers
A commonly found strain of Staphylococcus may help to protect against skin cancer, and could lead to preventive treatments, say scientists

Nicola Davis

28, Feb, 2018 @7:00 PM

Adapted military scanner offers breast cancer hope

Machine replaces pathologists in fast, reliable diagnosis of tumours.

David Adam, science correspondent

10, Jun, 2004 @1:25 AM

Ultrasound could kill cancer cells

'Invisible scalpels' burn away tumours.

Tim Radford

16, Feb, 2004 @11:56 AM

Doctors discover why gene therapy gave boys cancer

Scientists have discovered why a pioneering gene therapy used to treat boys born with a rare disease of the immune system gave two of them cancer.

Ian Sample, science correspondent

17, Oct, 2003 @10:11 AM

Breast cancer screening hope

New breast cancer screening technology that could offer a faster and more accurate diagnosis for thousands of women each year has been developed by British scientists.

David Adam, science correspondent

10, Jun, 2004 @1:39 AM