According to long-term research results, pomegranate juice may slow the  progression of post-treatment prostate cancer recurrence. 
The researchers found that men who have undergone treatment for  localized prostate cancer could benefit from drinking pomegranate juice. 
A detectable level of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is the first  indicator of recurrent prostate cancer after prostate cancer treatment.  The concept of PSA doubling time is found to be a reliable tool to  distinguish which patients have prolonged innocuous PSA levels after  therapy from those who are at great risk for disease recurrence and  death from prostate cancer. Doubling time is defined as the duration for  PSA levels in the blood to increase by 100 percent. 
Patients with a PSA doubling time of less than three months after  therapy are at imminent risk of death from prostate cancer. Patients  with a doubling time of three to 12 months are at a significant risk for  the development of systematic disease and cancer-specific death.  Patients with PSA doubling times of one to 10 years are more likely to  have a local rather than systematic recurrence, and patients with a PSA  doubling time of greater than 10 years are at a low risk of recurrence. 
The two-stage clinical trial followed a total of 48 participants over  six years. Eligible participants had a rising PSA after prostate cancer  surgery or radiotherapy, a PSA greater than 0.2 ng/ml and less than 5  ng/ml and a Gleason score of 7 or less. These patients were treated by  drinking eight ounces of pomegranate juice daily. Currently, in the  sixth year of treatment, active patients who remain on the study have a  median total follow-up of 56 months. These participants continue to  experience a significant increase in PSA doubling time following  treatment, from a mean of 15.4 months at baseline to 60 months  post-treatment, with a median PSA slope decrease of 60 percent, 0.06 to  0.024. 
Researchers compared active patients, who remain on the study, with  non-active patients, who no longer remain on the study. Though these two  groups demonstrated similar mean PSA doubling times at baseline, both  the PSA doubling time prolongation and the decline in median PSA slope  were greater in active patients when compared to non-active patients. 
"This study suggests that pomegranate juice may effectively slow the  progression of prostate cancer after unsuccessful treatment," said  Christopher Amling, an American Urological Association spokesman. "This  finding and other ongoing research might one day reveal that pomegranate  juice is an effective prostate cancer preventative agent as well." 
Parts of this ongoing study suggest that some patients may be more  sensitive to the effects of pomegranate juice on PSA doubling time.  Phase three of this study is currently underway to further evaluate the  benefits of pomegranate juice in a placebo-controlled manner.












 
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