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Clinical Investigations |
-Hydroxyestrone in Premenopausal Women during a Soya Diet Containing Isoflavones1
Departments of Preventive Medicine and Community Health [L-J. W. L., M. C., S. J., J. J. G., K. E. A.], and Obstetric and Gynecology [M. N.], The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555
Asian diets high in soy are associated with lower risk for breast cancer
compared with Western diets. Moreover, higher levels of two putative
carcinogenic metabolites of 17ß-estradiol, 4- and
16
-hydroxyestrogen, and lower amounts of anticarcinogenic
metabolites, 2-hydroxyestrogens, have been associated with greater
breast cancer risk. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that
consumption of a soya diet containing the weakly estrogenic isoflavones
genistein and daidzein may alter the metabolism of 17ß-estradiol to
2- and 16
-hydroxylated products. Eight premenopausal women were
placed on a soya-containing, constant diet in a metabolic unit. The
diet provided 400 kilocalories from soymilk and 113202 mg/day
(158 ± 26 mg/day, mean ± SD)
isoflavones daily for a complete menstrual cycle. After a washout
period of 4 months, the subjects consumed the same diet, but with
soymilk that contained <4.5 mg/day isoflavones
("isoflavone-free"). Urine samples were collected for 24 h
daily for the entire cycle during each soya diet period for the
analysis of daidzein, genistein, and 2- and 16
-hydroxyestrone.
Subjects excreted measurable amounts of daidzein (11.639.2 mg/day)
and genistein (2.918.2 mg/day) during the isoflavone-rich soya diet
but not during the isoflavone-free soya diet. The diet rich in
isoflavones increased the cycle mean daily urinary excretion of
2-hydroxyestrone (averaged over the entire cycle) from 11.6 ± 2.06 to 17.0 ± 2.96 nmol/12-h (P
= 0.03), a 47% increase. However, the mean daily
excretion of 16
-hydroxyestrone did not change (7.0 ± 1.14 nmol/12-h during the isoflavone-free and 7.7 ± 1.25 nmol/12-h during the isoflavone-rich diet; P
= 0.36). The ratio of 2-hydroxyestrone to
16
-hydroxyestrone was higher during the isoflavone-rich soya diet
(2.6 ± 0.34) than during the isoflavone-free diet
(2.0 ± 0.32; P = 0.01), a
27% increase. These results suggest that soya isoflavones increase the
metabolism of endogenous estrogens to the protective 2-hydroxylated
estrogens in women, and this may play an important role in lowering
17ß-estradiol levels and the long-term risk for breast cancer.
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