| Literature DB >> 31443386 |
Matteo Santoni1, Alessia Cimadamore2, Francesco Massari3, Francesco Piva4, Gaetano Aurilio5, Angelo Martignetti6, Marina Scarpelli2, Vincenzo Di Nunno3, Lidia Gatto3, Nicola Battelli1, Liang Cheng7, Antonio Lopez-Beltran8, Rodolfo Montironi9.
Abstract
Background: In human populations, a certain amount of data correlate obesity/body mass index (BMI) with urothelial cancer (UC) and prostate cancer (PCa) occurrence, however this is not fully elucidated at all stages of disease. In an attempt to shed light on uncertain areas in such field, in the present review we illustrate the main molecular mechanisms linking obesity and cancer, focusing on the correlation between obesity and tumor risk, disease progression and response to chemo- and immunotherapy in patients with UC and the predictive/prognostic role of obesity in PCa patients treated with the currently available therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: BMI; adipose tissue; obesity; prostate cancer; response to therapy; urothelial cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443386 PMCID: PMC6770077 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11091225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1The pathway shows the influence of adipocytes on cancer. The arrows indicate induction or activation, the line ending with an oval segment (AMPK on mTOR) indicates inhibition. The substances released from adipocytes diffuse through the blood circulation and reach cancer cells where activate different cellular pathways. The latter lead to an increase of cell proliferation, survival and angiogenesis. IGF1: Insulin-like growth factor I. IGF1R: Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor. INSR: Insulin receptor. IRS1: Insulin receptor substrate 1. BAD: Bcl2-associated agonist of cell death. MAPK: Mitogen-activated protein kinase. LEPR: Leptin receptor. ADIPOR1: Adiponectin receptor protein 1. ADIPOR2: Adiponectin receptor protein 2. VEGFA: Vascular endothelial growth factor A. AMPK: AMP-activated protein kinase. mTOR: Serine/threonine-protein kinase mTOR. CP: Ceruloplasmin. SLC31A1: High affinity copper uptake protein 1. TNF: Tumor necrosis factor. TNFRSF: Tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily. IL6: Interleukin-6. IL6R: Interleukin-6 receptor subunit alpha. PTGS2: Prostaglandin G/H synthase 2. PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-kinases. AKT: serine/threonine kinase. HIF1A: Hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha.
Figure 2Abundant adipose tissue within the bladder wall, partially replacing the muscularis propria. 20× magnification.
BMI and response of urothelial cancer to chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
| Patients | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 88 mUC patients | SMI was a significant and independent predictor of shorter OS (HR 0.90, | Fukushima et al., 2015 [ |
| 87 mUC patients who underwent chemotherapy | SMI stratified by the value of the BMI was a significant predictor of shorter OS in univariate analysis ( | Abe et al., 2018 [ |
| 537 mUC patients treated with cisplatin-based combination therapy | Embolic events and renal failure were higher in patients with an average or higher BSA. | Leiter et al., 2016 [ |
| 976 patients with different tumors: NSCLC (65.1%), melanoma (18.7%), RCC (13.8%) and others (2.4%) | Median TTF, PFS and OS were significantly longer for overweight/obese patients in univariate ( | Cortellini et al., 2019 [ |
mUC: metastatic urothelial carcinoma; NSCLC: Non-small cell lung cancer; RCC: renal cell carcinoma; SMI: Skeletal muscle index; BMI: body mass index; BSA: body surface area; HR: Hazard ratio; TTF: time to treatment failure; PFS: progression free survival; OS: overall survival.
Figure 3Prostate biopsy showing prostate acinar adenocarcinoma (Gleason score 3 + 4 = 7, grade group 2; percentage of Gleason pattern 4 equal to 40%; Gleason pattern 4 architecture fused glands). The tumor has spread to the periprostatic soft tissue composed by adipose and fibrous tissue and nerves. Fibrosis basically replaced the adipose tissue when infiltrated by cancer, i.e., stromal reaction. 10× magnification.
Obesity and response to therapy in prostate cancer.
| Drug | Patients/Cells | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Docetaxel | 1006 CRPC patients | Obesity was associated with younger age, lower PSA and tALP, and higher performance status, primary Gleason sum, testosterone and Hb. In multivariate analysis, neither BMI, presence of obesity, nor baseline testosterone was significantly associated with OS or PSA declines. | Armstrong et al., 2009 [ |
| 333 mCRPC patients | High VMR, obesity, and weekly regimens were significant predictors of longer survival after docetaxel. | Wu et al., 2015 [ | |
| 63 mCRPC patients | In multivariate analysis, BMI ≥25 kg/m2 (HR: 0.349, CI: 0.156–0.782, | Cushen et al., 2016 [ | |
| Cabazitaxel | Human cell co-culture models | ASC-mediated chemoresistance to cabazitaxel. ASC induce epithelial-mesenchymal transition in prostate cancer cells. | Su et al., 2019 [ |
| Abiraterone acetate and Enzalutamide | 105 patients | At multivariable analysis BMI >25 kg/m2 resulted significantly associated both with worse progression-free survival and worse OS ( | Cavo et al., 2018 [ |
| 120 patients mCRPC | High volume of SAT is independently associated with OS. | Antoun et al., 2015 [ | |
| Radium223 | 92 mCRPC patients | Patients’ weight, BMI, ECOG-PS, Hb and tALP significantly correlated with OS at univariate analysis, while only ECOG-PS and Hb levels were significant predictors of OS at multivariate analysis. | Frantellizzi et al., 2018 [ |
mCRPC: metastatic prostate cancer; BMI: Body Mass Index; OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival; VMR: visceral fat-to-muscle area ratio; ASC: adipose stromal cells; SAT: subcutaneous adipose tissue; ECOG-PS: Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-Performance Status; Hb: Hemoglobin; tALP: total alkaline phosphatase.