Literature DB >> 3123081

Cancer cachexia.

J A Norton1, J L Peacock, S D Morrison.   

Abstract

Cancer cachexia is a complex syndrome that includes host tissue wasting, anorexia, asthenia, and abnormal host intermediary metabolism. It is present in approximately 50% of cancer patients during treatment and nearly 100% of treated cancer patients at death. Cachexia has a detrimental impact on cancer therapy. The central problem of cancer cachexia is that energy balance is not maintained, and the host has a relative hypophagia which results in host tissue wasting. The tumor by its nature and obligate growth can continue to consume glucose, amino acids, and lipids at the expense of the host. This produces abnormal host intermediary metabolism including elevated glucose production and recycling, decreased muscle protein synthesis, and increased muscle and fat breakdown. The exact mechanisms of cancer cachexia have been only partially elucidated. The identification of signal molecules like cachectin which mediate these changes may be on the horizon. Nutritional support can reverse some of the derangements seen with cachexia, and there is evidence that functional lean body mass or body cell mass can be restored in some (but not all) patients. However, nutritional support has not yet improved response to chemotherapy or radiation therapy, nor has it improved host tolerance of chemotherapy. It has improved operative mortality and morbidity in cachectic cancer patients undergoing major surgical procedures. Optimum host nutritional support appears to be dependent on high insulin concentrations in both humans and rats. Insulin and exercise may be methods to preserve host lean tissue and feed the host rather than the tumor. Future studies depend on better definition of tumor-bearing host metabolism, altering the relationship between neoplasm and host to preferentially feed the host, and making the neoplasm more susceptible to effective treatment.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1987        PMID: 3123081     DOI: 10.1016/s1040-8428(87)80003-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Oncol Hematol        ISSN: 1040-8428            Impact factor:   6.312


  11 in total

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Authors:  Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Stephanos Pavlides; Barbara Chiavarina; Gloria Bonuccelli; Trimmer Casey; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Gemma Migneco; Agnieszka Witkiewicz; Renee Balliet; Isabelle Mercier; Chengwang Wang; Neal Flomenberg; Anthony Howell; Zhao Lin; Jaime Caro; Richard G Pestell; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2010-11-30       Impact factor: 4.534

3.  An intermediate dose of LCMV clone 13 causes prolonged morbidity that is maintained by CD4+ T cells.

Authors:  Andrew Stamm; Laura Valentine; Rashaun Potts; Mary Premenko-Lanier
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2012-02-04       Impact factor: 3.616

Review 4.  Understanding the "lethal" drivers of tumor-stroma co-evolution: emerging role(s) for hypoxia, oxidative stress and autophagy/mitophagy in the tumor micro-environment.

Authors:  Michael P Lisanti; Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Barbara Chiavarina; Stephanos Pavlides; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Agnieszka Witkiewicz; Zhao Lin; Renee Balliet; Anthony Howell; Federica Sotgia
Journal:  Cancer Biol Ther       Date:  2010-09-19       Impact factor: 4.742

5.  Evidence for the involvement of interleukin 6 in experimental cancer cachexia.

Authors:  G Strassmann; M Fong; J S Kenney; C O Jacob
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1992-05       Impact factor: 14.808

6.  Metabolic effects of cachectin/tumor necrosis factor are modified by site of production. Cachectin/tumor necrosis factor-secreting tumor in skeletal muscle induces chronic cachexia, while implantation in brain induces predominantly acute anorexia.

Authors:  K J Tracey; S Morgello; B Koplin; T J Fahey; J Fox; A Aledo; K R Manogue; A Cerami
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1990-12       Impact factor: 14.808

7.  Evidence that tumor necrosis factor plays a pathogenetic role in the paraneoplastic syndromes of cachexia, hypercalcemia, and leukocytosis in a human tumor in nude mice.

Authors:  T Yoneda; M A Alsina; J B Chavez; L Bonewald; R Nishimura; G R Mundy
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1991-03       Impact factor: 14.808

8.  Purification of ornithine decarboxylase-inducing factor from cell-free ascites fluid of Ehrlich ascites tumor and its characteristics.

Authors:  K Imamura; Z Y Wang; K Murayama-Oda; H K Kim; T Tsuji; T Tanaka
Journal:  Jpn J Cancer Res       Date:  1991-03

Review 9.  The Metabolic Fates of Pyruvate in Normal and Neoplastic Cells.

Authors:  Edward V Prochownik; Huabo Wang
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2021-03-30       Impact factor: 6.600

10.  Increased hepatic nicotinamide N-methyltransferase activity as a marker of cancer cachexia in mice bearing colon 26 adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  A Okamura; Y Ohmura; M M Islam; M Tagawa; K Horitsu; Y Moriyama; S Fujimura
Journal:  Jpn J Cancer Res       Date:  1998-06
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