The 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to 3 researchers who
elucidated the molecular mechanism controlling circadian rhythms in humans and other
organisms. Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash, and Michael W. Young jointly received the
prize for determining how the gene period, known since the 1970s to
influence biological rhythms in fruit flies, actually works. They found that the protein
PER, produced by the gene, builds up in the cytoplasm of a cell and then degrades in an
approximate 24-hour rhythm. This suggested a feedback loop in which PER inhibits its own
synthesis. But PER cannot enter the nucleus to access the gene and stop the synthetic
process. The researchers then determined that the gene timeless
synthesizes the protein TIM, which binds with PER to allow it to enter the cell nucleus.
It can then block the activity of the period gene. The gene
doubletime was also shown contribute to this system by delaying the
buildup of PER enough to approximate a 24-hour rhythm. This system is at the heart of
biological rhythms in all multicellular organisms and affects a multitude of bodily
functions that impact health. This Nobel Prize was truly well-deserved. And as the clock
turns over to a new year, this prize seems a particularly suitable subject for
reflection in launching the first issue of a new volume of Integrative Cancer
Therapies.Hall, Rosbash, and Young performed their critical experiments on molecular mechanisms of
circadian rhythms in the 1980s and early 1990s. But exploration of the clinical
consequences of circadian rhythms in cancer began in the 1970s and proceeded in parallel
with the molecular work. The accumulation of clinical as well as experimental work on
circadian rhythms in cancer has been steadily building over the years. The circadian
system is now starting to come into its own as a target for clinical interventions in
cancer treatment. A recent review notes that disruptions of normal circadian rhythms of
sleeping and activity are widespread in cancerpatients, especially those with
metastatic cancer.[1] Such disruptions manifest clinically as inability to sleep at night, excessive
daytime napping, fatigue, depression, anorexia, and reduced quality of life. Alarmingly,
disrupted circadian rhythms predict reduced overall survival in patients with advanced
lung, kidney, breast, and colon cancer. At the cellular level, disrupted circadian
rhythms are known to adversely affect angiogenesis,[2] apoptosis,[3] and many other biological processes important in cancer. It is well known that
melatonin is important as a “timekeeper” for the circadian system, cuing the system to
coordinate with environmental light and darkness. Many cancerpatients take melatonin
supplements for anticancer effects. But recent work suggests that melatonin alone does
not reregulate sleep in breast cancerpatients.[4] Rather, timing of meals and exercise, strategic light exposure, social support,
scheduled sleep times, and potentially drugs that target circadian timing may be needed
to intervene to ameliorate cancerpatients’ disrupted rhythms.[1,4] Nevertheless, there are studies
indicating that high doses of melatonin may improve outcomes of chemotherapy, and
numerous studies with melatonin demonstrate its anticancer effects. This suggests that
integrative treatment approaches incorporating both lifestyle changes and melatonin may
play a large role in circadian cancer therapy.Integrative Cancer Therapies has been consistently featuring articles on
circadian cancer biology since 2009. In that year, we published an entire special issue
on circadian rhythms and cancer, guest edited by leading circadian researchers William
Hrushesky and David Blask.[5] The special issue contains articles on topics such as tumor suppressor functions
of period genes; circadian disruptions and cytokine secretion;
circadian effects on breast tumor metabolism; clustering of circadian disruption,
fatigue, and anorexia in advanced cancerpatients; and practical approaches to circadian therapy.[6] A 2011 systematic review examined the effects of melatonin as an adjuvant to
cancer treatment.[7] In 2013, the use of melatonin as a dietary supplement in cancer was discussed.[8] And in 2016 we published the first of a series of 3 studies of the impacts of
artificial light at night, which is known to suppress melatonin levels, on the incidence
of breast cancer.[9] We hope to see many more articles on the topic of circadian cancer biology
published in Integrative Cancer Therapies and elsewhere in the coming
years. Integrative therapies have, we believe, a unique role to play in improving the
disrupted circadian rhythms of advanced cancerpatients, potentially affecting treatment
tolerance, response, life quality, and survival. We plan for this journal to continue to
play a major role in disseminating studies and practical information on this topic.In the first volume of each issue of Integrative Cancer Therapies we
acknowledge the expertise and scientific wisdom of an important group of people: those
who have participated in our peer review process in the past year. Journal editors know,
perhaps better than most researchers, the critical role of peer review in maintaining
the quality of scientific publication. The efforts of reviewers have gone for many years
with minimal academic recognition, and our publication of the names of reviewers is just
a small token of the true value of their time and of the work they put into article
reviews. However, Integrative Cancer Therapies is now offering
reviewers a way to track and showcase their reviews through the use of the Publons
service. Publons is a website (publons.com) that allows reviewers to
register each of their reviews, turning them into a measureable research output that can
showcase reviewers’ expertise and the influence they exert in their fields. Reviewers
are now given the opportunity to seamlessly choose to register their Integrative
Cancer Therapies reviews with Publons as a part of the review submission
process. We hope our reviewers will join the more than 200 000 researchers who have
already joined the Publons site, so they can better highlight their contributions to
their academic colleagues.In the meantime, we honor those who participated in our review process during 2017 by
listing them below:Douglas Abdalla, Elizabeth Addington, Carl Ade, Sabina Adorisio, Lise Alschuler,
Kristina Althoff, Chelsea Anderson, Claudia Arab, Antonietta Arcella, S. Arora,
Anna Arthur, Kristen Arthur, Banu Arun, Kyeore Bae, Lynda Balneaves, Louiza
Béchohra, Eran Ben Arye, Hartmut Bertz, Penny Block, Stephen Bloor, Barbara
Brocki, Amit Budhraja, Zhen Cai, Francesco Carli, Anitra Carr, Tracey Carr,
Maëlle Carraz, Raymond Chang, Alejandro Chaoul, Jiun Liang Chen, Qi Chen, Tsai
Ju Chien, Jun-Yong Choi, Kyung-Eun Choi, Marcia Ciol, Jayson Co, Colin Curtain,
Debabrata Das, Jharna Datta, Niloy Ranjan Datta, Lisa Davis, Haryana Dhillon,
Alexandra Dimitrova, Alberto Dionigi, Sergey Dyshlovoy, Canan Eroğlu, Xiang Fan,
Yibin Feng, Giammaria Fiorentini, Michael Foley, Judith Fouladbakhsh, Michael
Frass, Carlo Fremd, Katharina Gaertner, Jürgen Gailer, Kay Garcia, Sastry
Gollapudi, Amir Hossein Goudarzian, Heather Greenlee, C. Guethlin, Huiru Guo,
Charlotte Gyllenhaal, Amanda Hagstrom, Tibor Hajtó, Thayele Purayil Hamsa, Reid
Hayward, Jacob Hill, Lara Hilton, John Hoffer, YongQiang Hua, Hua-ping Huang,
David Hui, Tania Islam, Ju-Hyun Jeon, Yi Jiang, Agata Kabala-Dzik, Gülendam
Karadağ, Konstantina Karatrantou, Ji-Ye Kee, Akbar Khan, Young-Kyoon Kim, Yihyun
Kwon, Judith Lacey, A. Laengler, Cardella Leak, Jungtae Leem, Teresa Lesiuk,
Le-Qun Li, Qinglin Li, Xiaoqian Li, Wei-Zhe Liang, Chuan-Bian Lim, Dai-Wei Liu,
Jun Liu, Jun Lu, Wolfgang Marx, Hannah Matthews, Michael McCulloch, Dwight
McKee, Mark Mead, Oliver Micke, Shiraz Mishra, Paola Muti, Robert Newman, Torben
Nielsen, Byeongsang Oh, Oluwadamilola Olaku, Agnieszka Olchowska-Kotala, Meagan
O’Neill, R. B. Oriá, Kazeem Oshikoya, Deng Pan, Siyaran Pandey, Jong-Hyock Park,
Luke Peppone, Constant Pieme, Gregory Plotnikoff, Morten Quist, A. D. Rapidis,
Sylvie Rapior, Marcella Renis, Mark Renneker, Ramona Ritzmann, Laura Rogers, Dan
Rubin, Daniel Santa Mina, Friedemann Schad, Katherine van Schaik, Stefan
Schönsteiner, Jessica Scott, Dugald Seely, Georg Seifert, Chun-Chuan Shih,
Pamela Siegel, Ana Paula Simões-Wüst, Robert Slater, Judith Smith, Peter Smith,
Bridget Southwell, Tobias Sprenger, Kannan Sridharan, Fiona Stacey, Leanna
Standish, Fiona Streckman, Daniel Sze, Kenzaburo Tani, Caroline Terranova,
Ysabella Vansebille, Erwin Wagner, Won-Bo Wang, Anna-Leila Williams, Raimond
Wong, Ting-Feng Wu, Yan Fei Xin, Linhhui Xu, Jun Yan, Geliang Yang, Song Yao,
Hung-Rong Yen, Seung-Gu Yeo, Hwa Seung Yoo, Seong Woo Yoon, Teresa Young, Guolin
Zhang, Rong Zhang, Jian-Hong Zhong, Suzanna Zick, Philipp Zimmer and Tycho
Zuzak.Our sincere gratitude to you all for your generous work and excellent service!
Authors: Moshe Frenkel; Donald I Abrams; Elena J Ladas; Gary Deng; Mary Hardy; Jillian L Capodice; Mary F Winegardner; J K Gubili; K Simon Yeung; Heidi Kussmann; Keith I Block Journal: Integr Cancer Ther Date: 2013-02-25 Impact factor: 3.279
Authors: Pasquale F Innominato; Andrew S Lim; Oxana Palesh; Mark Clemons; Maureen Trudeau; Andrea Eisen; Cathy Wang; Alex Kiss; Kathleen I Pritchard; Georg A Bjarnason Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2015-08-11 Impact factor: 3.603
Authors: Pasquale F Innominato; Véronique P Roche; Oxana G Palesh; Ayhan Ulusakarya; David Spiegel; Francis A Lévi Journal: Ann Med Date: 2014-06 Impact factor: 4.709
Authors: Keith I Block; Penny B Block; Susan Reynolds Fox; Jamie Stouffer Birris; April Y Feng; Michael de la Torre; Deva Nathan; Peter Tothy; Amanda K Maki; Charlotte Gyllenhaal Journal: Integr Cancer Ther Date: 2009-12 Impact factor: 3.279