End Fatigue
Black Cohosh May Decrease Breast Cancer Risk by Half While Preventing Cancer Recurrence
A 2007 study suggests that women taking supplements of black cohosh may cut their risk of breast cancer by more than 50 percent. The researchers evaluated 949 women with breast cancer and 1,524 without cancer.
Rebbeck and co-workers found that the use of black cohosh was associated with a 61 percent reduction in the risk of breast cancer. This risk reduction was also observed for Remifemin, a herbal preparation derived from black cohosh, which was calculated to reduce the risk of breast cancer by 53 percent.1 In addition, in a study of 18,861 women with breast cancer, those on black cohosh were 41% less likely to develop a recurrence of their cancer over the average 3.6 years they were followed.2
I am not recommending it as a breast cancer preventive or treatment. Nonetheless, a lot of unbalanced information has been put out to scare women away from using herbals, and I believe this is one more example. Some doctors suggest that black cohosh increases estrogen production (not the case) and one mouse study of mice with breast cancer found it to be detrimental. On the other hand, every study I've seen testing it in human breast cancer cells has shown it to be at least neutral and usually helpful. Given the overall data, if I was a women taking tamoxifen, I would be on the Remifemin. I would also be on B vitamins and Coenzyme Q10.
References:
1. International Journal of Cancer 1 April 2007, Volume 120, Issue 7, Pages 1523-1528, doi: 10.1002/ijc.22485 "A retrospective case-control study of the use of hormone-related supplements and association with breast cancer" Authors: T.R. Rebbeck, A.B. Troxel, S. Norman, G.R. Bunin, A. DeMichele, M. Baumgarten, M. Berlin, R. Schinnar, B.L. Strom
2. Henneicke-von Zepelin HH, et al. Black Cohosh extract and recurrence free survival after breast cancer. Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2007; 45(3):143-145
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