| Literature DB >> 25866793 |
Diana Hatoum1, Eileen M McGowan2.
Abstract
There is substantial epidemiological evidence pointing to an increased incidence of breast cancer and morbidity in obese, prediabetic, and diabetic patients. In vitro studies strongly support metformin, a diabetic medication, in breast cancer therapy. Although metformin has been heralded as an exciting new breast cancer treatment, the principal consideration is whether metformin can be used as a generic treatment for all breast cancer types. Importantly, will metformin be useful as an inexpensive therapy for patients with comorbidity of diabetes and breast cancer? In general, meta-analyses of clinical trial data from retrospective studies in which metformin treatment has been used for patients with diabetes and breast cancer have a positive trend; nevertheless, the supporting clinical data outcomes remain inconclusive. The heterogeneity of breast cancer, confounded by comorbidity of disease in the elderly population, makes it difficult to determine the actual benefits of metformin therapy. Despite the questionable evidence available from observational clinical studies and meta-analyses, randomized phases I-III clinical trials are ongoing to test the efficacy of metformin for breast cancer. This special issue review will focus on recent research, highlighting in vitro research and retrospective observational clinical studies and current clinical trials on metformin action in breast cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25866793 PMCID: PMC4383151 DOI: 10.1155/2015/548436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Mechanisms of metformin action to inhibit cancer. Metformin disrupts circulating glucose and insulin levels and reduces inflammation. The organic cation transporter (OCT1) mediates the first step in metformin cellular response [51–53]. (1) Metformin activates the AMPK-P pathway through inhibition of Complex 1 of the mitochondrial respiratory chain [54, 55]. This leads to the inhibition of mTOR and thus loss of cell proliferation and inhibition of glucose synthesis [56–59]. (2) LKB1 may act as an intermediatory of AMPK activation [60, 61]. (3) Metformin blocks cAMP and PKA, which in turn antagonizes glucagon action [62]. (4) Metformin acts as an antifolate hindering DNA replication [63]. (5) Metformin induces an anti-inflammatory response via the Src-mediated NF-κΒ pathway [64]. (6) Metformin action is implicated in both AMPK dependent and independent inhibition of the angiogenesis process [65].
BCa outcome with metformin treatment with/without diabetes mellitus.
| References | Patient cohort | Age group | Ethnicity | BCa type | Key findings |
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| Currie et al. 2012 [ | 112408 (8392 DM) | >35 years | N/S | N/S | No mortality differences with/without metformin at diagnosis |
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| Chlebwoski et al. 2012 [ | 68,019 patients (3401 DM) | Postmenopausal | Mixed race | ER+ PR+ | Women with diabetes were older and were more likely to be black and obese. |
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| Kiderlen et al. 2013 [ | 3124 (505 DM) | Postmenopausal | N/S (Netherlands) | ER/PR+ | Patients with diabetes had overall better relapse-free survival (possibly through the effect of metformin, speculated not proven) |
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| Xiao et al. 2014 [ | 5785 Luminal-type BCa (680 DM) | Pre-and postmenopausal | Asian | Luminal A | BMI was not a prognostic factor in these studies |
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| Bonanni et al. 2012 [ | 200 (non-DM) | >18 years both pre and postmenopausal | N/S | Luminal A | Metformin treatment: |
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| Besic et al. 2014 [ | 573 (invasive BCa) | 38–93 years | N/S | Luminal A | DM + metformin—lower grade BCa compared to no metformin |
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| Berstein et al. 2011 [ | 90 (BCa and DM) | 48–82 years postmenopausal | N/S | ER+ | Metformin increased PR in diabetic patients. |
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| Lega et al. 2014 [ | Meta-analyses—Cancer patients with diabetes (all cancer types) | All ages | N/S | All types | No correlation between BCa and metformin and increased survival |
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| Lega et al. 2013 [ | 2361 (BCa and DM) | >66 years | Ontario | All types | No significant reduction in mortality or DFS in patients using metformin |
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| Oppong et al. 2014 [ | 2889 (BCa + chemotherapy) | 38–80 years | Caucasian (72) | ER+, ER− | No difference between metformin and nonmetformin users in RFS, OS, and contralateral BCa |
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| Bayraktar et al. 2012 [ | 1448 (triple negative BCa—TNBC) | More diabetic patients were postmenopausal | black, and obese | Triple negative | Metformin does not significantly impact on survival in TNBC. |
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| Ferro et al. 2013 [ | 110 (BCa) | >50 | Mixed (white, black, other) | All types | Radiation therapy and metformin treatment |
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| Kim et al. 2014 [ | 208 (BCa—no DM) | Postmenopausal | Asian | ER+ | Study in progress |
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Kalinsky et al. 2014 [ | 33 non DM patients (Obese) | >21 years | 80% Hispanic | 85% HR+ | Metformin treatment pre-surgery—No reduction in proliferation of BCa tumour. Reduction in diabetic markers (insulin resistance) |
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| Cazzaniga et al. 2013 [ | 100 BCa patients-Analysed | 45–62 years | N/S | Luminal A | Metformin treatment pre-surgery—No reduction in proliferation of BCa tumour. Reduction in diabetic markers (insulin resistance) |
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| Hadad et al. | 55 (BCa—no DM) | 41–82 years | N/S | N/S | This trial supports antiproliferative effects of metformin in BC patients |
BCa: breast cancer; DM: diabetes mellitus; N/S: not stated; TNBC: triple negative BCa.