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Philip R. Taylor, Howard L. Parnes, Scott M. Lippman, Science Peels the Onion of Selenium Effects on Prostate Carcinogenesis, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Volume 96, Issue 9, 5 May 2004, Pages 645–647, https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djh147
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The role of the essential trace element selenium in prostate cancer was first (and last) editorialized in the Journal in 1998 in conjunction with the report of the first large prospective observational study of selenium and the risk of advanced prostate cancer (1,2). Although the principals for the 1998 study were the same as those for the observational study by Li et al. (3) in this issue of the Journal, much has changed in the basic scientific understanding of selenium. The onion, an allium vegetable that concentrates selenium, is an apt metaphor for the scientific work of peeling back the layers of molecular effects and mechanisms underlying the strong selenium epidemiology in the prostate.
The past 6 years have seen the publication of seven prospective epidemiologic studies of selenium status and prostate cancer (including the study in this issue of the Journal) (2–8), with a collective total of nearly 2000 case subjects. The studies involved low [Europe (8)], moderate [Maryland (5)], and high [Hawaii (4)] selenium status populations, and all but one found a protective effect associated with higher concentrations of selenium. Furthermore, low plasma selenium levels are associated with increases in other cancers and human diseases (9). Although the findings of the observational studies have been encouraging and consistent regarding the prostate, the most powerful evidence to date for the beneficial effect of selenium is the 49% reduction in prostate cancer incidence in the randomized, placebo-controlled Nutritional Prevention of Cancer (NPC) trial, in which selenium was administered at 200 μg/day (10,11). On the basis of the NPC trial, epidemiologic studies, a randomized prevention trial in China of selenium in combination with other minerals and vitamins (12), and early preclinical data (13–17) available in 2000, selenium was included in the Selenium and Vitamin E Cancer Prevention Trial (SELECT) in 32 400 men to definitively test the role of supplementation with selenium and/or vitamin E in the prevention of prostate cancer (18).