| Literature DB >> 21811094 |
Haider Mashhedi1, Marie-José Blouin, Mahvash Zakikhani, Stéphanie David, Yunhua Zhao, Miguel Bazile, Elena Birman, Carolyn Algire, Antonio Aliaga, Barry J Bedell, Michael Pollak.
Abstract
Insulin regulates glucose uptake by normal tissues. Although there is evidence that certain cancers are growth-stimulated by insulin, the possibility that insulin influences tumor glucose uptake as assessed by ( 18) F-2-Fluoro-2-Deoxy-d-Glucose Positron Emission Tomography (FDG-PET) has not been studied in detail. We present a model of diet-induced hyperinsulinemia associated with increased insulin receptor activation in neoplastic tissue and with increased tumor FDG-PET image intensity. Metformin abolished the diet-induced increases in serum insulin level, tumor insulin receptor activation and tumor FDG uptake associated with the high energy diet but had no effect on these measurements in mice on a control diet. These findings provide the first functional imaging correlate of the well-known adverse effect of caloric excess on cancer outcome. They demonstrate that, for a subset of neoplasms, diet and insulin are variables that affect tumor FDG uptake and have implications for design of clinical trials of metformin as an antineoplastic agent.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21811094 DOI: 10.4161/cc.10.16.16219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Cycle ISSN: 1551-4005 Impact factor: 4.534