| Literature DB >> 27885880 |
Leslie C Costello1, Renty B Franklin1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Efficacious chemotherapy does not exist for treatment or prevention of prostate, liver, and pancreatic carcinomas, and some other cancers that exhibit decreased zinc in malignancy. Zinc treatment offers a potential solution; but its support has been deterred by adverse bias. Areas covered: 1. The clinical and experimental evidence for the common ZIP transporter/Zn down regulation in these cancers. 2. The evidence for a zinc approach to prevent and/or treat these carcinomas. 3. The issues that introduce bias against support for the zinc approach. Expert opinion: ZIP/Zn downregulation is a clinically established common event in prostate, hepatocellular and pancreatic cancers. 2. Compelling evidence supports the plausibility that a zinc treatment regimen will prevent development of malignancy and termination of progressing malignancy in these cancers; and likely other carcinomas that exhibit decreased zinc. 3. Scientifically-unfounded issues that oppose this ZIP/Zn relationship have introduced bias against support for research and funding of a zinc treatment approach. 4. The clinically-established and supporting experimental evidence provide the scientific credibility that should dictate the support for research and funding of a zinc approach for the treatment and possible prevention of these cancers. 5. This is in the best interest of the medical community and the public-at-large.Entities:
Keywords: ZIP transporters; decreased zinc carcinomas; hepatocellular carcinoma; prostate cancer; zinc treatment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27885880 PMCID: PMC5183570 DOI: 10.1080/14728222.2017.1265506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Opin Ther Targets ISSN: 1472-8222 Impact factor: 6.902