| Literature DB >> 24926474 |
Xia Sheng1, Steven D Mittelman2.
Abstract
Obesity is responsible for ~90,000 cancer deaths/year, increasing cancer incidence and impairing its treatment. Obesity has also been shown to impact hematological malignancies, through as yet unknown mechanisms. Adipocytes are present in bone marrow and the microenvironments of many types of cancer, and have been found to promote cancer cell survival. In this review, we explore several ways in which obesity might cause leukemia treatment resistance. Obese patients may be at a treatment disadvantage due to altered pharmacokinetics of chemotherapy and dosage "capping" based on ideal body weight. The adipose tissue provides fuel to cancer cells in the form of amino acids and free fatty acids. Adipocytes have been shown to cause cancer cells to resist chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. In addition, obese adipose tissue is phenotypically altered, producing a milieu of pro-inflammatory adipokines and cytokines, some of which have been linked to cancer progression. Given the prevalence of obesity, understanding its role and adipose tissue in acute lymphoblastic leukemia treatment is necessary for evaluating current treatment regimen and revealing new therapeutic targets.Entities:
Keywords: adipocytes; apoptosis; drug resistance; leukemia; lipolysis; obesity; pharmacokinetics; tumor microenvironments
Year: 2014 PMID: 24926474 PMCID: PMC4046266 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2014.00053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Representative bone marrow biopsies from a patient with childhood ALL before (left) and after (right) induction chemotherapy. Picture taken by Hiro Shimada (Wright-Giemsa stain, magnified 200×).
Retrospective studies examining the association between overweight/obesity and ALL outcome (EFS, event free survival; HR, hazard ratio).
| Study | Population (age) | Cooperative group/regimen | No | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baillargeon ( | Predominantly Hispanic B-precursor ALL patients (2–9 years) | South Texas pediatric minority based community clinical oncology program/pediatric oncology group legacy protocols | 241 | HR of obesity on EFS = 1.09 (0.54–2.20) | “No association between obesity and survival” |
| Predominantly Hispanic B-precursor ALL patients (10–18 years) | South Texas pediatric minority based community clinical oncology program/pediatric oncology group legacy protocols | 81 | HR of obesity on EFS = 1.48 (0.73–3.01) | ||
| Hijiya ( | Predominantly white ALL | St Jude total therapy studies/total XII, XIIIA, XIIIB, and XIV | 621 | 5 year EFS: obese = 72.7 ± 5.9%, normal weight = 78.7 ± 2.1%, | “No association between BMI and outcome or toxicity in children with ALL” |
| Subset ≥10 years | St Jude total therapy studies/total XII, XIIIA, XIIIB, and XIV | 185 | “Relatively small number of patients and the use of different treatments compared to those of the CCG study” | ||
| Butturini ( | Predominantly white newly diagnosed ALL | CCG1881 CCG1922 CCG1891 CCG1882 CCG1901 | 4260 | HR of obesity on events 1.26 (1.03–1.55), | “In this study, obesity seems to be one of the main determinants of relapse in … patients diagnosed with ALL after their 10th birthday …” |
| Predominantly white newly diagnosed ALL (≥10 years) | CCG1882 CCG1901 | 1003 | HR of obesity on events 1.48 (1.07–2.03), | ||
| Verification cohort (≥10 years) | CCG1961 | 1160 | Obese and ≥10 years old: 1.42 (1.03–1.96) | ||
| Gelelete ( | Children with ALL (mainly <10 years) | IPPMG/UFRJ/Berlin–Frankfurt–Munich protocols | 181 | HR of overweight and obese on EFS 1.92 (1.42–2.6) | “… Overweight or obesity at diagnosis was an independent prognostic factor to the 5-years EFS in children with ALL …” |
| Aldhafiri ( | UK national cohort excluding high risk and low risk (2–15 years) | UKALL X treatment trial | 337 | Relapse rate in overweight/obese = 36.2%, healthy weight = 36.6% | “No evidence that being overweight/obese at diagnosis impairs prognosis in childhood ALL in the UK” |