| Literature DB >> 30540126 |
Fernanda Antunes1, Adolfo Garcia Erustes1, Angélica Jardim Costa1, Ana Carolina Nascimento1, Claudia Bincoletto1, Rodrigo Portes Ureshino2, Gustavo José Silva Pereira1, Soraya Soubhi Smaili1.
Abstract
Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, and its incidence is continually increasing. Although anticancer therapy has improved significantly, it still has limited efficacy for tumor eradication and is highly toxic to healthy cells. Thus, novel therapeutic strategies to improve chemotherapy, radiotherapy and targeted therapy are an important goal in cancer research. Macroautophagy (herein referred to as autophagy) is a conserved lysosomal degradation pathway for the intracellular recycling of macromolecules and clearance of damaged organelles and misfolded proteins to ensure cellular homeostasis. Dysfunctional autophagy contributes to many diseases, including cancer. Autophagy can suppress or promote tumors depending on the developmental stage and tumor type, and modulating autophagy for cancer treatment is an interesting therapeutic approach currently under intense investigation. Nutritional restriction is a promising protocol to modulate autophagy and enhance the efficacy of anticancer therapies while protecting normal cells. Here, the description and role of autophagy in tumorigenesis will be summarized. Moreover, the possibility of using fasting as an adjuvant therapy for cancer treatment, as well as the molecular mechanisms underlying this approach, will be presented.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30540126 PMCID: PMC6257056 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2018/e814s
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Completed and current clinical trials investigating the effects of fasting as adjunct therapy to anti-cancer treatment.
| Cancer/Phase | Treatment | Outcome/Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast Cancer, Hormone-resistant Prostate Cancer, Recurrent Prostate Cancer | Chemotherapy + low-calorie diet | Currently recruiting participants | NCT01802346 |
| Advanced Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Chemotherapy + fasting and nutritional therapy | Currently recruiting participants | NCT02710721 |
| HER2 Negative Breast Cancer | Chemotherapy + fasting mimicking diet | Currently recruiting participants | NCT02126449 |
| Breast Cancer | Chemotherapy + short-term fasting (IF) | IF associated with chemotherapy was well tolerated, reduced hematological toxicity in HER2-negative BC patients and also induced a faster recovery of DNA damage in PBMCs (peripheral blood mononuclear cells) | NCT01304251 ( |
| Gynecological cancer disease (ovarian and breast cancer) | Chemotherapy + short-term fasting | Completed, no results reported | NCT01954836 |
| Breast cancer | Chemotherapy + short-term fasting | Completed, no results reported | NCT02379585 |
| Malignant Neoplasm | Short-term fasting prior to systemic chemotherapy | Active | NCT01175837 |
| Malignant Neoplasm | Chemotherapy + fasting | Completed, no results reported | NCT00757094 |
Figure 1Presumable molecular mechanisms induced by fasting and anticancer treatment to promote intracellular changes and autophagy induction in tumor cells. I) Fasting may oppose the Warburg effect (glucose breakdown by glycolysis even in the presence of oxygen), favoring oxidative phosphorylation in tumor cells and resulting in increased ROS production and reduced levels of lactate and possibly ATP. The increase in the ADP/ATP ratio can activate the AMPK pathway, leading to autophagy induction. Moreover, the sustained stressful environment can result in cell death induction. II) Several tumors harbor mutations that favor MAPK pathway hyperactivation, which enables tumor cell growth, survival and proliferation. Therapies targeting this pathway, as well as fasting, may result in the downregulation of this pathway alongside a reduction in AKT and mTOR activation, resulting in autophagy induction and cell death. III) Furthermore, fasting potentiates the detrimental effects of chemotherapy, such as DNA damage, thus activating the cell death machinery, deregulating pro- and antiapoptotic proteins, and inducing mitochondrial alterations and caspase activation, which in turn culminates in apoptosis.