Medical Hypotheses
Volume 59, Issue 4 , Pages 450-457, October 2002

Capsaicin pepper, cancer and ethnicity

  • Victor E Archer

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to: Dr. V.E. Archer, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, School of Medicine, Rocky Mountain Center for Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 75 South 2000 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-5120, USA. Fax: 801-581-7224
  • ,
  • Daniel W Jones

Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

Received 7 November 2001; accepted 13 February 2002.

Abstract 

The `hot' sensation produced by exposure to pepper is apparently due to two natural carcinogens: capsaicin in chilli type peppers and safrole in black/white pepper. There are four cookeries in the United States that are noted for their high pepper content: Mexican-American, Cajun, white Creole, and black Creole. Each is largely confined to a single ethnic-cultural group which is concentrated in some counties. By use of county population and mortality data, significantly higher rates for stomach and liver cancer were found in counties inhabited by these four ethnic-cultural groups than in matched control counties. This involved both sexes. The cancer increase was dependent on the concentration of these groups in a county. These results strengthen and extend an earlier case-control study which found odds ratios above 5 for the stomach cancer association with capsaicin pepper. It is further evidence that capsaicin is a human carcinogen.

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 All resources for this study were from personal resources of the authors and from the University of Utah School of Medicine. There are no known conflicts of interest.

PII: S0306-9877(02)00152-4

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 59, Issue 4 , Pages 450-457, October 2002