Panax ginseng: A Role in Cancer Therapy?

Author:

Chang Yuan S.1,Seo Eun-Kyoung2,Gyllenhaal Charlotte3,Block Keith I.2

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmacy, China Medical College, Taichung, Taiwan, Republic of China

2. College of Pharmacy, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Korea

3. Program for Collaborative Research in the Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago, and Block Medical Center, Evanston, Illinois,

Abstract

Panax ginseng is a plant that has been used in traditional medicine in China for thousands of years. It is used as a general tonic or adaptogen with chronically ill patients and is frequently featured in traditional medicine prescriptions from China, Japan, and Korea used by cancer patients. The putative active compounds are the ginsenosides, of which there are more than two dozen. These compounds are found in both Panax ginseng and in other Panax species that are used in herbal medicine. Analysis of ginsenosides is being used in developing quality control assessments for ginseng, which has frequently been adulterated due to its high cost; many currently available standardized extracts do appear to contain the amounts of ginsenosides listed on package labeling. The toxicity of ginseng appears to be low: some of the reports of toxic episodes of ginseng may actually pertain to other components of multicomponent preparations. Very low incidence of toxicity has been observed in ginseng clinical trials using well-characterized preparations. Numerous pharmacological activities of ginseng and the ginsenosides have been explored: the authors review here the activities relating to cancer. Immune system modulation, antistress activities, and antihyperglycemic activities are among the most notable features of ginseng noted in laboratory and clinical analyses. Much testing has been done in humans to explore ginseng's purported antifatigue properties, but this area remains controversial. A number of investigations point to antitumor properties and other pharmacological activities related to cancer, but no trials have yet confirmed a clinically significant anticancer activity. Cancer patients may empirically find ginseng to be useful when they are fatigued, although clinical trials should be conducted to confirm its benefits.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Complementary and alternative medicine,Oncology

Reference258 articles.

1. A Contribution to Our Knowledge of Ginseng

2. Brekhman II. Zhen-shen (Panax ginseng). Leningrad, Russia: Gosudarst Isdat. et Med. Lit; 1955.

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