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Dive into the research topics where Yuan Rong Zhu is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuan Rong Zhu.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2005

Effects of Glucosinolate-Rich Broccoli Sprouts on Urinary Levels of Aflatoxin-DNA Adducts and Phenanthrene Tetraols in a Randomized Clinical Trial in He Zuo Township, Qidong, People's Republic of China

Thomas W. Kensler; Jian Guo Chen; Patricia A. Egner; Jed W. Fahey; Lisa P. Jacobson; Katherine K. Stephenson; Lingxiang Ye; Jamie L. Coady; Jin Bing Wang; Yan Wu; Yan Sun; Qi Nan Zhang; Bao Chu Zhang; Yuan Rong Zhu; Geng Sun Qian; Stephen G. Carmella; Stephen S. Hecht; Lorie Benning; Stephen J. Gange; John D. Groopman; Paul Talalay

Residents of Qidong, Peoples Republic of China, are at high risk for development of hepatocellular carcinoma, in part due to consumption of aflatoxin-contaminated foods, and are exposed to high levels of phenanthrene, a sentinel of hydrocarbon air toxics. Cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, contain anticarcinogens. Glucoraphanin, the principal glucosinolate in broccoli sprouts, can be hydrolyzed by gut microflora to sulforaphane, a potent inducer of carcinogen detoxication enzymes. In a randomized, placebo-controlled chemoprevention trial, we tested whether drinking hot water infusions of 3-day-old broccoli sprouts, containing defined concentrations of glucosinolates, could alter the disposition of aflatoxin and phenanthrene. Two hundred healthy adults drank infusions containing either 400 or <3 μmol glucoraphanin nightly for 2 weeks. Adherence to the study protocol was outstanding; no problems with safety or tolerance were noted. Urinary levels of aflatoxin-N7-guanine were not different between the two intervention arms (P = 0.68). However, measurement of urinary levels of dithiocarbamates (sulforaphane metabolites) indicated striking interindividual differences in bioavailability. An inverse association was observed for excretion of dithiocarbamates and aflatoxin-DNA adducts (P = 0.002; R = 0.31) in individuals receiving broccoli sprout glucosinolates. Moreover, trans, anti-phenanthrene tetraol, a metabolite of the combustion product phenanthrene, was detected in urine of all participants and showed a robust inverse association with dithiocarbamate levels (P = 0.0001; R = 0.39), although again no overall difference between intervention arms was observed (P = 0.29). Understanding factors influencing glucosinolate hydrolysis and bioavailability will be required for optimal use of broccoli sprouts in human interventions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Chlorophyllin intervention reduces aflatoxin–DNA adducts in individuals at high risk for liver cancer

Patricia A. Egner; Jin Bing Wang; Yuan Rong Zhu; Bao Chu Zhang; Yan Wu; Qi Nan Zhang; Geng Sun Qian; Shuang Yuan Kuang; Stephen J. Gange; Lisa P. Jacobson; Kathy J. Helzlsouer; George S. Bailey; John D. Groopman; Thomas W. Kensler

Residents of Qidong, Peoples Republic of China, are at high risk for development of hepatocellular carcinoma, in part from consumption of foods contaminated with aflatoxins. Chlorophyllin, a mixture of semisynthetic, water-soluble derivatives of chlorophyll that is used as a food colorant and over-the-counter medicine, has been shown to be an effective inhibitor of aflatoxin hepatocarcinogenesis in animal models by blocking carcinogen bioavailability. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled chemoprevention trial, we tested whether chlorophyllin could alter the disposition of aflatoxin. One hundred and eighty healthy adults from Qidong were randomly assigned to ingest 100 mg of chlorophyllin or a placebo three times a day for 4 months. The primary endpoint was modulation of levels of aflatoxin-N7-guanine adducts in urine samples collected 3 months into the intervention measured by using sequential immunoaffinity chromatography and liquid chromatography–electrospray mass spectrometry. This aflatoxin–DNA adduct excretion product serves as a biomarker of the biologically effective dose of aflatoxin, and elevated levels are associated with increased risk of liver cancer. Adherence to the study protocol was outstanding, and no adverse events were reported. Aflatoxin-N7-guanine could be detected in 105 of 169 available samples. Chlorophyllin consumption at each meal led to an overall 55% reduction (P = 0.036) in median urinary levels of this aflatoxin biomarker compared with those taking placebo. Thus, prophylactic interventions with chlorophyllin or supplementation of diets with foods rich in chlorophylls may represent practical means to prevent the development of hepatocellular carcinoma or other environmentally induced cancers.


Cancer Prevention Research | 2011

Bioavailability of Sulforaphane from Two Broccoli Sprout Beverages: Results of a Short-term, Cross-over Clinical Trial in Qidong, China

Patricia A. Egner; Jian Guo Chen; Jin Bing Wang; Yan Wu; Yan Sun; Jian Hua Lu; Jian Zhu; Yong-Hui Zhang; Yong-Sheng Chen; Marlin D. Friesen; Lisa P. Jacobson; Alvaro Muñoz; Derek K. Ng; Geng Sun Qian; Yuan Rong Zhu; Tao Yang Chen; Nigel P. Botting; Qingzhi Zhang; Jed W. Fahey; Paul Talalay; John D. Groopman; Thomas W. Kensler

One of several challenges in design of clinical chemoprevention trials is the selection of the dose, formulation, and dose schedule of the intervention agent. Therefore, a cross-over clinical trial was undertaken to compare the bioavailability and tolerability of sulforaphane from two of broccoli sprout–derived beverages: one glucoraphanin-rich (GRR) and the other sulforaphane-rich (SFR). Sulforaphane was generated from glucoraphanin contained in GRR by gut microflora or formed by treatment of GRR with myrosinase from daikon (Raphanus sativus) sprouts to provide SFR. Fifty healthy, eligible participants were requested to refrain from crucifer consumption and randomized into two treatment arms. The study design was as follows: 5-day run-in period, 7-day administration of beverages, 5-day washout period, and 7-day administration of the opposite intervention. Isotope dilution mass spectrometry was used to measure levels of glucoraphanin, sulforaphane, and sulforaphane thiol conjugates in urine samples collected daily throughout the study. Bioavailability, as measured by urinary excretion of sulforaphane and its metabolites (in approximately 12-hour collections after dosing), was substantially greater with the SFR (mean = 70%) than with GRR (mean = 5%) beverages. Interindividual variability in excretion was considerably lower with SFR than with GRR beverage. Elimination rates were considerably slower with GRR, allowing for achievement of steady-state dosing as opposed to bolus dosing with SFR. Optimal dosing formulations in future studies should consider blends of sulforaphane and glucoraphanin as SFR and GRR mixtures to achieve peak concentrations for activation of some targets and prolonged inhibition of others implicated in the protective actions of sulforaphane. Cancer Prev Res; 4(3); 384–95. ©2011 AACR.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1997

Oltipraz chemoprevention trial in Qidong, Jiangsu Province, People's Republic of China

Bao Chu Zhang; Yuan Rong Zhu; Jin Bing Wang; Yan Wu; Qi Nan Zhang; Geng Sun Qian; Shuang Yuan Kuang; Yan Feng Li; Xi Fang; Lu Yi Yu; Silvio De Flora; Lisa P. Jacobson; Audrey Zarba; Patricia A. Egner; Xia He; Jia-Sheng Wang; Baibai Chen; Cheryl Enger; Nancy E. Davidson; Gary B. Gordon; Mary B. Gorman; Hans J. Prochaska; John D. Groopman; Alvaro Muñoz; Kathy J. Helzlsouer; Thomas W. Kensler

Oltipraz has been used clinically in many regions of the world as an antischistosomal agent and is an effective inhibitor of aflatoxin hepatocarcinogenesis in rats. This chemopreventive action of oltipraz results primarily from an altered balance in aflatoxin metabolic activation and detoxication. In 1995, a randomized, placebo‐controlled, double‐blind intervention was conducted in residents of Qidong, Peoples Republic of China, who are at high risk for exposure to aflatoxin and development of hepatocellular carcinoma. The major study objectives were to define a dose and schedule for oltipraz that would reduce levels of aflatoxin biomarkers in biofluids of the participants, and to further characterize dose‐limiting side effects. Two hundred thirty‐four healthy eligible individuals, including those infected with HBV, were randomized to receive either 125 mg oltipraz daily, 500 mg oltipraz weekly, or placebo. Blood and urine specimens were collected to monitor potential toxicities and evaluate biomarkers over the 8‐week intervention and subsequent 8‐week follow‐up periods. Overall, compliance in the intervention was excellent; approximately 85% of the participants completed the study. Objective evaluation of adverse events was greatly facilitated by inclusion of a placebo arm in the study design. A syndrome involving numbness, tingling, and pain in the fingertips was the only event that occurred more frequently among the active groups (18 and 14% of the daily 125 mg and weekly 500 mg arms, respectively) compared to placebo (3%). These symptoms were reversible and could be relieved with non‐steroidal antiinflammatory agents. A more complete understanding of the chemopreventive utility of oltipraz awaits completion of an assessment of the efficacy of oltipraz in modulating levels of aflatoxin biomarkers. J. Cell. Biochem. Suppls. 28/29:166–173.


Carcinogenesis | 2011

Predictive power of hepatitis B 1762T/1764A mutations in plasma for hepatocellular carcinoma risk in Qidong, China.

Alvaro Muñoz; Jian Guo Chen; Patricia A. Egner; Melinda L. Marshall; Jamie L. Johnson; Michael F. Schneider; Jian Hua Lu; Yuan Rong Zhu; Jinbing Wang; Tao Yang Chen; Thomas W. Kensler; John D. Groopman

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a leading cause of cancer mortality with nearly 700,000 deaths occurring annually. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major contributor to HCC and acquired mutations in the HBV genome may accelerate its pathogenesis. In this study, a matched case-control investigation of 345 men who died of HCC and 625 controls were nested within a cohort of male hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers from Qidong, China. Matched preserving odds ratios (ORs) were used as a measure of association and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) as a measure of precision. Real-time polymerase chain reaction allowed for a quantitative comparison of the levels of the HBV 1762(T)/1764(A) mutation in cases and controls. A total of 278 (81%) of the cases were positive for the HBV 1762(T)/1764(A) mutation compared with 250 (40%) of the controls. The matched preserving OR of 6.72 (95% CI: 4.66 to 9.68) strongly indicated that cases were significantly more probably than controls to have the mutation. Plasma levels of DNA harboring the HBV mutation were on average 15-fold higher in cases compared with controls (P < 0.001). Most strikingly, the level of the mutation in the 20 controls who later developed and died of HCC were on average 274-fold higher than controls who did not develop HCC. Thus, within this cohort of HBsAg carriers at high risk of developing HCC, individuals positive for the HBV 1762(T)/1764(A) mutation at enrollment were substantially more probably to subsequently develop HCC, with a higher concentration of the mutation in plasma enhancing predisposition for cancer development.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1996

Smokers and urinary genotoxins: Implications for selection of cohorts and modulation of endpoints in chemoprevention trials

Silvio De Flora; Anna Camoirano; Maria Bagnasco; Carlo Bennicelli; Nico van Zandwijk; Gea Wigbout; Geng Sun Qian; Yuan Rong Zhu; Thomas W. Kensler

Urinary genotoxicity assays measure the internal dose of genotoxic carcinogens, thereby providing a particularly sensitive endpoint for selecting cohorts of individuals exposed to cigarette smoke or other mutagens excreted with urines, as well as for evaluating the modulation of this parameter after administration of chemopreventive agents. Mutagenicity of urines was investigated in smoking Italian volunteers, who received oral N‐acetylcysteine (NAC) at the same doses which are usually prescribed for the long‐term treatment of chronic bronchitis. The daily excretion of mutagens, concentrated on XAD‐2 columns and tested in Salmonella typhimurium YG1024 with S9 mix, was significantly and remarkably decreased by NAC in the majority of the subjects examined so far. Time‐course experiments showed that this effect starts since the first day of drug administration and reverses when treatment is withdrawn. In addition, NAC administration almost totally prevented urinary genotoxicity in one subject whose concentrated urines induced a differential lethality in Escherichia coli strains having distinctive DNA repair capacities. The decrease of urinary genotoxicity produced by NAC in the majority of smokers correlates with the ability of this thiol to prevent tumors and to affect a variety of intermediate biomarkers in animal models. Modulation of the urinary excretion of mutagens is one of the biomarkers evaluated in two ongoing Phase II chemoprevention trials. One study involves the oral administration of NAC in Dutch smokers. The pretreatment urine samples of all the subjects so far recruited are clearly mutagenic. The other study involves the oral administration of the dithiolethione oltipraz to individuals living in the Qidong County of the Peoples Republic of China, an area of high endemy for HBV infection and of high exposure to aflatoxins. Additionally, a large proportion of the recruited male subjects are smokers. A total of 500 urine specimens will be assayed from 240 subjects according to a complex protocol arranged in three consecutive phases. J. Cell. Biochem. 25S:92–98.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2007

Acceleration to Death from Liver Cancer in People with Hepatitis B Viral Mutations Detected in Plasma by Mass Spectrometry

Jian Guo Chen; Shuang Yuan Kuang; Patricia A. Egner; Jian Hua Lu; Yuan Rong Zhu; Jin Bing Wang; Bao Chu Zhang; Tao Yang Chen; Alvaro Muñoz; Thomas W. Kensler; John D. Groopman

Liver cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in many regions of the world. With the goal to discover biomarkers that reflect subsets of high-risk individuals and their prognosis, we nested our study in a male cohort of 5,581 hepatitis B surface antigen carriers in Qidong, Peoples Republic of China, who were recruited starting in 1989. By December 2003, 667 liver cancer cases were diagnosed in this group and plasma samples collected at the initial screening at enrollment were available in 515 cases who had succumbed to liver cancer. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA could be isolated in 355 (69%) of these samples. In 14%, 15%, 19%, 31%, and 22%, screening took place at ≤1.5, 1.51 to 3, 3.01 to 5, 5.01 to 9, and >9 years before death, respectively; and 39% died at age below 45 years. The relation between mutations in HBV and time to death were determined by logistic regression for the odds of mutation and by survival analyses methods with age as the time scale. In 279 (79%) of these individuals, the samples contained a two-nucleotide 1762T/1764A HBV mutation. Sixteen samples lacking the 1762T/1764A mutation had novel mutations elsewhere in the 1761 to 1767 region of the HBV genome. There was a statistically significant difference (P = 0.012) for the high prevalence of the HBV mutations in the men who died from hepatocellular carcinoma under the age of 45 years relative to those who died after 55 years of age and HBV mutations accelerated death (relative hazard, 1.40; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.85) and that the effect was attenuated by age from 2.04 for age 35 years to 1.0 for age 65 years with the 90% confidence band being above 1 for ages <50 years. These findings provide a conceptual framework to explain the acceleration of mortality in individuals infected with HBV. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2007;16(6):1213–8)


Molecular and Clinical Oncology | 2017

Cancer survival in Qidong between 1972 and 2011: A population‑based analysis

Jian‑Guo Chen; Jian Zhu; Yong-Hui Zhang; Yi‑Xin Zhang; Deng‑Fu Yao; Yong-Sheng Chen; Jian Hua Lu; Lu‑Lu Ding; Hai‑Zhen Chen; Chao‑Yong Zhu; Li‑Ping Yang; Yuan Rong Zhu; Fu‑Lin Qiang

Population-based cancer survival is an improved index for evaluating the overall efficiency of cancer health services in a given region. The current study analysed the observed survival and relative survival of leading cancer sites from a population-based cancer registry between 1972 and 2011 in Qidong, China. A total of 92,780 incident cases with cancer were registered and followed-up for survival status. The main sites of the cancer types, based on the rank order of incidence, were the liver, stomach, lung, colon and rectum, oesophagus, breast, pancreas, leukaemia, brain and central nervous system (B and CNS), bladder, blood [non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL)] and cervix. For all malignancies combined, the 5-year observed survival was 13.18% and the relative survival was 15.80%. Females had higher observed survival and relative survival (19.32 and 22.71%, respectively) compared with males (9.63 and 11.68%, respectively). The cancer sites with the highest five-year relative survival rates were the female breast, bladder, cervix and colon and rectum; followed by NHL, stomach, B and CNS cancer and leukaemia. The poorest survival rates were cancers of oesophagus, lung, pancreas and liver. Higher survival rates were observed in younger patients compared with older patients. Cancers of the oesophagus, female breast and bladder were associated with higher survival in middle-aged groups. Improved survival rates in the most recent two 5-year calendar periods were identified for stomach, lung, colon and rectum, oesophagus, female breast and bladder cancer, as well as leukaemia and NHL. The observations of the current study provide the opportunity for evaluation of the survival outcomes of frequent cancer sites that reflects the changes and improvement in a rural area in China.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 1996

Temporal patterns of aflatoxin-albumin adducts in hepatitis B surface antigen-positive and antigen-negative residents of Daxin, Qidong County, People's Republic of China.

Jinbing Wang; Geng Sun Qian; Audrey Zarba; Xia He; Yuan Rong Zhu; Bao-Chu Zhang; Lisa P. Jacobson; Stephen J. Gange; Alvaro Muñoz; Thomas W. Kensler


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 1998

Oltipraz chemoprevention trial in Qidong, People's Republic of China: modulation of serum aflatoxin albumin adduct biomarkers.

Thomas W. Kensler; Xia He; M Otieno; Patricia A. Egner; Lisa P. Jacobson; Baibai Chen; Jinbing Wang; Yuan Rong Zhu; Bao Chu Zhang; Jin Bing Wang; Yan Wu; Qi Nan Zhang; Geng Sun Qian; Shuang Yuan Kuang; Xi Fang; Yan Feng Li; L Y Yu; Hans J. Prochaska; Nancy E. Davidson; Gary B. Gordon; Mary B. Gorman; Audrey Zarba; Cheryl Enger; Alvaro Muñoz; Kathy J. Helzlsouer

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Alvaro Muñoz

Johns Hopkins University

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Jin Bing Wang

Johns Hopkins University

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Geng Sun Qian

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Bao Chu Zhang

Johns Hopkins University

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Jian Guo Chen

Johns Hopkins University

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Jian Hua Lu

Johns Hopkins University

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