# Pancreatic Cancer

EGCG is the best-studied catechin in **green tea**, and pancreatic cancer is one of the more compelling mechanistic areas in the EGCG literature.

### Overview

The pancreatic cancer evidence includes direct growth inhibition, synergy with gemcitabine, and effects on EMT, invasion, and stem-cell behaviour.

### Key human data

* No large phase III oncology treatment trials exist
* Epidemiological signals are mixed but suggest possible risk reduction with higher green tea intake in some cohorts
* Clinical use remains exploratory and adjunctive

### Key preclinical data

* EGCG inhibits growth across multiple pancreatic cancer cell lines
* Xenograft work has shown significant tumour-weight reduction without obvious liver or kidney toxicity in treated animals
* EGCG plus gemcitabine produces greater growth inhibition than either agent alone in preclinical models
* EGCG suppresses migration, invasion, and cancer stem-cell signalling pathways such as Wnt/β-catenin and Notch

### Clinical positioning

Pancreatic cancer remains a reasonable adjunctive-discussion area because standard options are limited and the preclinical synergy data is strong, but this is not established treatment.

### References

Epigallocatechin-3-Gallate Suppresses Pancreatic Cancer Cell Growth, Migration and Invasion in vitro and in vivo\
<https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6722696/>

An overview of pre-clinical studies on the effects of EGCG in pancreatic cancer\
<https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28631776/>

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This information is for education only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please speak with a qualified clinician before making changes to care, medication, or supplement use.
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