Epidemiologic studies have associated vitamin D, attained through nutrition and sun exposure, with reduced cancer risk. Although dose-limiting hypercalcemia has limited the use of natural vitamin D in cancer prevention, several promising new synthetic vitamin D analogs (deltanoids) are under development. Examples are KH-1060, EB-1089, 1 α-hydroxyvitamin D 5, vitamin D2, and QW-1624F2-2. Clinical targets for deltanoids include colon, prostate, and breast. Studies to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying the observed efficacy of deltanoids are ongoing. The vitamin D receptor, a steroid/thyroid receptor superfamily member, appears to control most deltanoid effects on proliferation, apoptosis, differentiation, and angiogenesis. © 2003 International Life Sciences Institute.
CITATION STYLE
Guyton, K. Z., Kensler, T. W., & Posner, G. H. (2003, July 1). Vitamin D and vitamin D analogs as cancer chemopreventive agents. Nutrition Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1301/nr.2003.jul.227-238
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