| Literature DB >> 31831021 |
Muhamad Noor Alfarizal Kamarudin1, Md Moklesur Rahman Sarker2,3, Jin-Rong Zhou4, Ishwar Parhar5.
Abstract
Growing evidence showed the increased prevalence of cancer incidents, particularly colorectal cancer, among type 2 diabetic mellitus patients. Antidiabetic medications such as, insulin, sulfonylureas, dipeptyl peptidase (DPP) 4 inhibitors and glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GLP-1) analogues increased the additional risk of different cancers to diabetic patients. Conversely, metformin has drawn attention among physicians and researchers since its use as antidiabetic drug exhibited beneficial effect in the prevention and treatment of cancer in diabetic patients as well as an independent anticancer drug. This review aims to provide the comprehensive information on the use of metformin at preclinical and clinical stages among colorectal cancer patients. We highlight the efficacy of metformin as an anti-proliferative, chemopreventive, apoptosis inducing agent, adjuvant, and radio-chemosensitizer in various colorectal cancer models. This multifarious effects of metformin is largely attributed to its capability in modulating upstream and downstream molecular targets involved in apoptosis, autophagy, cell cycle, oxidative stress, inflammation, metabolic homeostasis, and epigenetic regulation. Moreover, the review highlights metformin intake and colorectal cancer risk based on different clinical and epidemiologic results from different gender and specific population background among diabetic and non-diabetic patients. The improved understanding of metformin as a potential chemotherapeutic drug or as neo-adjuvant will provide better information for it to be used globally as an affordable, well-tolerated, and effective anticancer agent for colorectal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Anticancer; Cancer; Chemopreventive; Colorectal cancer; Metformin; Type 2 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31831021 PMCID: PMC6909457 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-019-1495-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
The summary of preclinical (in vitro) use of metformin in CRC models
| CRC model | Main findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| HT29 cells | Concentration-dependent anti-proliferative of metformin (2.5–20 mM, 72 h) that inhibits HT-29 growth by activating the AMPK (phospho-AMPKα; Thr172). Metformin (10, 25, and 50 mM) inhibits cell growth in concentration- and time-(24 and 48 h) dependent manner by inducing apoptosis and autophagy (increased expression of APAF-1, caspase-3, PARP, and Map-LC3) through oxidative stress (inactivation NRF-2 and activation NF-κB in HT29 cells. | [ |
| SW620 cells | Metformin (1–10 mmol/L, 72 h) suppresses proliferation in both concentration- and time-dependent manner via arresting the G0/G1 phase. Metformin (5 mM, 2 h) induces apoptosis in hypoxic SW620 cells and enhanced with co-treatment of (E)-4-((2-(3-oxopop-1-enyl)phenoxy)methyl) pyridinium malonic acid Metformin in combination with 5-FU significantly enhances antiproliferative, apoptosis, and cell-cycle arrestment in SW620 cells. | [ |
| Organoid models from peritoneal metastases of CRC patients | Combination of metformin (5 mM for 120 h) with 4-IPP (100 μM, 24 h) synergistically promotes apoptosis by activating AMPK that reduces ribosomal protein S6 and p4EBP-1 activity that depolarizes mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I. | [ |
| CaCo2 cells | Metformin (5–100 mM, 48 h) significantly decreases cell viability (up to 96% reduction) and edits the methylation status of RASSF1A which causes cellular apoptosis, cell cycle arrestment, and cell migration. | [ |
| Human LoVo and mouse MCA38 cells | Metformin (10 μg/mL) alone and in combination with adinopectin (20 μg/mL) for 24 h suppresses IL-1β-induced malignant potential via STAT3 and AMPK/LKB1 signaling pathways. Co-administration with IL-1β increases the Sub-G1 population and decreases the G1 and/or S population by modulating cyclin E2, p21, and p27 expression. | [ |
| COLO 205 cells | Combination of metformin (10 mM) with silibinin (100 mM) demonstrates a better antiproliferative activity as compared to either metformin (20 mM) or silibinin (200 mM) alone without any cytotoxic effects on the normal HCoEpiC. | [ |
| HCT116 cells | Low concentration (60 μM) in combination with genistein (2 μM) and lunasin (2 μM) increases PTEN expression, inhibits cancer stem cell-likecells CD133+CD44+ subpopulation, and reduces FASN expression. Metformin (5–20 mM) synergistically (with 5-FU and oxaliplatin); known as FuOx; 200 μM 5-FU and 5 μM oxaliplatin) induces cell death, inhibits colonospheres formation, enhances colonospheres disintegration, and suppresses CRC cell migration. FuOx combination inactivates Akt with increased miRNA145 (tumor suppressive) and reduction in miRNA 21 (oncogenic) expression. Additionally Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway and transcriptional activity of TCF/LEF, β-catenin as well as c-myc expression were inhibited in HCT-116 cells. Metformin (5 mM) and 5-FU (25 μM) enhances antiproliferative and migration through the silencing of miR-21 expression that increases the Sprouty2. Metformin (1–10 mM, 24–48 h) induces clonogenic cell death in both wild-type p53 HCT-116 (HCT116 p53+/+) and p53-deficient HCT-116 cells (HCT116 p53−/−) and augments radio-sensitization towards IR in HCT116 p53−/− cells. Metformin (10 mM) suppresses LCA (30 μM)-oxidative stress by inactivating NF-κB and downregulating IL-8. Metformin-treated conditioned media inhibits of HUVECendothelial cell proliferation and tube-like formation. . Metformin (1–4 mM, 24–72 h) reduces EMT in HCT116 sphere cells via inactivation of Wnt3α/β-catenin signaling (with reduction of Vimentin and increased epithelial marker). Consequently, metformin promotes sensitization of HCT116 sphere cells towards 5-FU treatment (25 μg/mL). | [ |
| Caco-2 and HCT116 cells | Addition of metformin to 5-ASA (48 h) inhibits the Caco-2 (13 mM of metformin and 2.5 mM of 5-ASA) and HCT-116 cells proliferation (13 mM of metformin and 2.5 mM of 5-ASA) and induces apoptosis by inducing oxidative stress and NF-κB inflammatory responses. | [ |
| DLD-1, HT-29, Colo205 and HCT116 | Metformin (2.5–10 mM) did not decrease the cell viability but sensitizes the cells towards TRAIL (50 ng/mL) that is followed with induction of extrinsic and intrinsic apoptosis through the suppression of Mcl-1 by promoting the dissociation of Noxa from Mcl-1 that activates E3 ligase Mule. | [ |
| HT-29, SW620, and HCT116 cells | Metformin addition to sirolimus synergistically promotes the reduction cell viability (48 h) via downregulation of p-mTOR, p-70S6K, p-4EBP1, livin, survivin, E-cadherin, TGF-β, and pSmad3. | [ |
| HT-29 and HCT116 cells | Single exposure (24 h) either 1,25D3 (10–1000 nM) or metformin (1–20 mM) reduces the cell viability in HCT116 (p53 wild-type), HCT116 (p53−/−), and HT-29 (p53 mutant). Both 1,25D3 and metformin synergistically promotes apoptosis, and autophagy irrespective of the p53 status in all of the cells tested via AMPK, intracellular ROS, Bcl-2, and increasing LC3II:LC3I ratio. Additionally, metformin addition in the combination treatment arrests cell cycle in G2/M phase (HCT116 p53−/−) and S phase (HT-29 cells). | [ |
| In a different report, metformin at 1 mM (24 h) increases the sensitization of HT29 cells to oxaliplatin (R = 2.66, P < 0.01) but no in HCT116 cells | [ | |
| DLD-1 cells | Metformin (5 mM, 24 h) synergistically promotes oxaliplatin (12.5 μM) cytotoxic and anti-proliferative b increasing HMGB1 expression via Akt and ERK1/2. Metformin activates AMPK signaling at lower concentration and short time exposure (0.5–2 μM, 1 h) prior to radiation leads to radioresistance. | [ |
| SW-480 and HT-29 | Pretreatment with metformin (2 mM, 16 h) activates AMPK signaling that inhibits the phosphorylation of β-catenin and Akt (Ser473) induced by insulin (10 ng/mL)or IGF-1 (10 ng/mL). | [ |
| HCT116, RKO and HT-29 cells | Metformin (1 and 5 mM, 24 h) did not inhibit the proliferation and daily treatment (5 mM, 2 weeks) did not suppress the anchorage-independent growth, apoptosis, autophagy, and cell cycle arrest. | [ |
The summary of preclinical (in vivo) use of metformin in CRC models
| CRC model | Main findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| HT-29-xenografted BALB/c-nude mice | Co-administration of metformin (250 mg/kg) with sirolimus (1 mg/kg), tacrolimus (1 mg/kg) or cyclosporin A (5 mg/kg) for four weeks significantly suppresses the tumor growth in HT-29-xenografted BALB/c-nude mice by downregulating the expression of p-mTOR, p-70S6K, p-4EBP1, livin, survivin, E-cadherin, TGF-β, and pSmad3. | [ |
Metformin (250 mg/kg/day, 10 weeks) reduces polyps number (2.0–2.5 mm) but increases polyps ranging from 1.0–1.5 mm in diameter in Metformin (250 mg/kg/day, 6–32 weeks) + basal diet inhibit formation of ACF in azoxymethane-induced mice. Treatment decreased total number of polyp formation (by 20%), polyp expansion (by 11%) and abolished polyps larger than 3 mm. Metformin suppressed the colonic epithelial cell proliferation (not by apoptosis) in the azoxymethane-induced mice. | [ | |
| MC38-xenografts mice | Metformin mitigates high-energy diet-induced tumor growth in MC38-xenografts mice by reducing FASN expression. | [ |
| Organoid peritoneal metastases of CRC patients xenografts | Metformin inhibits DMH-induced ACF formation in diabetic Sprague Dawley rats by reversing the Warburg effect. | [ |
| COLO25 and DSS-mice | Metformin significantly suppressed TNF-α-stimulated COLO 205 cells and ameliorated DSS-induced acute colitis and colitic cancer in IL-10−/− mice. | [ |
| SW48-Mut xenograft nude mice | Pre-administration of metformin (one week) reduces tumor volume in a time-dependent manner (maximum inhibition ~ 50%) in SW48-Mut xenograft nude mice. | [ |
| HCT116 and HT-29-xenograft SCID mice | FuOx mixture (metformin (5 weeks) + 5-FU (IP, 25 mg/kg, once a week for 3 weeks) and oxaliplatin (IP, 2 mg/kg, once a week for 3 weeks)) inhibited tumor volume (50%, day 34) in HCT116-xenografts and in HT-29-xenografts (more than 70%). FuOx downregulated Metformin (IP, 250 mg/kg/day) prior to IR inhibits 59% tumor growth as compared to 4.5% in metformin-treated only and IR-treated only HCT116 p53−/− xenografts mice. Combination with IR inhibits DNA repair protein that increases radiosensitivity in HCT116 p53−/− xenografts mice. Metformin (alone, 150 mg/kg body weight) and with rapamycin (intraperitoneal, 0.5 mg/kg body weight) modulates AMPK and mTOR modulation, inhibits tumor volume in HCT116-xenorafted NOD/SCIDs male mice. The addition of probiotic mixture inhibited the intracellular ROS, IL-3, and IL-6 levels which further reduced the tumor volume by 40%. | [ |
| DMH-induced CRC in diabetic and non-diabetic mice | Single (100 or 200 mg/kg) and combination of metformin and/or oxaliplatin inhibited angiogenesis and tumor proliferation in DMH-induced CRC diabetic and non-diabetic mice by suppressing tumor angiogenesis and cell proliferation by reducing serum VEGF level and intratumoral IGFR-I. | [ |
| PDX- female SCID mice | Metformin (150 mg/kg, 24 days) suppresses tumor growth (by 50%) in PDX CRC-female SCID mice. Combination with 5-FU (IP, 25 mg/kg) inhibited tumor growth (up to 85%). Metformin exposure to ex vivo PDX organoids culture suppresses O2 via activation of AMPK signaling and inhibited culture growth. | [ |
| DMH-induced CRC rat and DMH-DSS-induced colitis-associated colon neoplasia mice model | Metformin (medium dose of 120 mg/kg/day) + vitamin D3 (100 IU/kg/day) synergistically enhances the chemopreventive effects against DMH-induced colon cancer rat and DMH-DSS-induced colitis-associated colon neoplasia mice model | [ |
The summarization of metformin clinical use for CRC
| Study population (Diabetic/Age/Gender/Stage) | Chemotherapy/Radiation/Surgery | Placebo/ Combined intervention/Drugs history | Dose & Duration of Treatment | HR /RR/Survival | Primary endpoint/secondary analysis | Life quality/Side-effects | Summary findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Non-diabetic,151 patients 79 metformin, 72 placebo Randomized phase 3 trial single or multiple colorectal adenomas or polyps resected by endoscopy87 | All had history of resection | i. Placebo controlled ii. Colonoscopies after one year treatment (71 metformin & 62 placebo) | 250 mg/day for one year | i. Total polyps RR 0·67, 95% CI 0·47–0·97 ii. Adenomas RR 0·60, 95% CI 0·39–0·92 | i. Total polyps Metformin vs Placebo 38% vs 56.5% ii. Total adenomas Metformin vs Placebo 30.6% vs 51.6% | 11% side effects grade 1 No serious adverse effects | Low-dose metformin reduced metachronous adenomas or polyps after polypectomy |
Diabetic and non-diabetic 50 patients with refractory metastatic CRC Age above 18 year-old (mean – 57 year-old)92 | All were treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy prior to study entry | 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) Leucovorin | i. Metformin – 850 mg orally 2 times/day ii. 5-FU 425 mg/m2 iii. Leucovorin – 50 mg by I.V. Treatment were given for 28 days/cycle until patients death | Not mentioned | i. Disease control rate (DCR) at 8 weeks from staring of study ii. Progression-free survival (PFS), OS, and toxicity | Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and myelotoxicity | i. Treatment - median PFS of 1.8 months and OS of 7.9 months ii. 22% met primary end-point – median PFS of 5.6 months and OS of 16.2 months iii. Prolonged survival for obese and 5-FU off patients |
482 patients (422 non-diabetic, 40 diabetic non-metformin, 20 diabetic metformin) with locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma Age median is 58 to 63 year-old70 | All were treated with chemotherapy, total mesorectal excision (TME) and radiotherapy prior to study entry | 5-fluorouracil-based chemotherapy (98%) followed by adjuvant chemotherapy (81.3%) 15% insulin use in both diabetic merformin and non-metformin group | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Pathologic complete response (pCR) | Not mentioned | i. Patients taking metformin had significantly increased disease-free ( ii. Patients taking metformin had a significantly higher rate of pCR than either nondiabetics or diabetics non-metformin |
86 diabetic CRC underwent resection 36 – metformin 50 – non user Age 29–88 years45 | All had history of resection 37 – neither chemotherapy nor radiation history | 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Metformin vs non-users i. incidence of metastasis 5.60% vs 21.6%, ii. CD133 expression 21.1% vs 50% iii. β-catenin expression 36.85 vs 72.2% iv. Poorly differentiated adenoma 2.78% vs 16.0% | Not mentioned | Metformin synergize 5-FU in reducing risk of poorly differentiated adenoma and metastasis incidence |
240 diabetic without CRC history Age, metformin 58.8 ± 9.9 non user 61.6 ± 10.390 | No | i. Aspirin ii. NSAIDs iii. Sulfonylurea | Not mentioned | Metformin - Advanced adenoma RR 0.071 | Colorectal adenocarcinoma – size, occurrence, number | Not mentioned | Metformin lower the risk of advanced CRC Adenomas in newly diagnosed patients |
2088 cases (66–80 years) and 9060 control (61–77 years) January 2000 – December 200977 | YES | i. Aspirin ii. NSAIDs iii. Sulfonylurea | Cumulative 2000 g (DDD) within 5 years | i. Reduced risk of CRC OR 0.83, 95% CI 0.68–1.00 ii. Protective in women vs men (OR 0.66, 95% CI 0.49–0.90) vs (OR 0.96, 95% CI 0.75–1.23) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Dose and duration response - reduced risk of CRC metformin > 250 DDD and > 1 year Protective effect of long-term metformin against CRC in women |
424 patients January 2004 – December 2008108 | YES | i. Insulin ii. ADDs iii. Anti-cholesterol iv. Aspirin | Dose not mentioned, duration between 2005 and 2008 | i. Metformin vs Non user − 76.9 vs 56.9 months (CI 61.4–102.4) vs CI 44.8–68.8) ii. 30% enhancement in overall survival (OS) | HbA1c level | Not mentioned | Metformin provided 30% improvement in OS as compared to other ADDs |
2066 postmenopausal Women, 50–79 years 1854 non-diabetic 84 diabetic(+metformin) 128 diabetic(−metformin)105 | YES | i. Insulin ii. Aspirin iii. NSAIDs | Median 4.1 years (3 days - 14.4 years) | i. Diabetic Metformin vs Non user - Non-significant (HR 0.78, 95% CI 0.38–1.55) ii. overall survival (HR 0.86, 95% CI 0.49–1.52) | i. Tumor size ii. Positive lymph nodes | Not mentioned | Non-significant difference specific survival in metformin compared to non-users |
| 315 patients with stage I–III colorectal cancer from 2001 to 200677 | YES | i. 52% - Metformin + sulfonylurea ii. 72% -non metformin + sulfonylurea iii. Insulin iv. Other ADDs | Low and high intensity Duration - none | Low intensity HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.41–1.58 High intensity HR 0.44, 95% CI 0.20–0.95 | Tumor grade/Size - Nonsignificant between metformin and non-users | Not mentioned | High-intensity metformin dosing reduced CRC-specific mortality |
A) i. 856 patients with CRC from 2003 to 2005 ii. Age: men and women < 40 years B) i. 814 patients with CRC from 2003 to 2005 ii. Age: men and women > 40 years C). Diabetes status: ≥ 1 year and ≥ 3 years76 | YES | None | i. < 1 year ii. 1–3 years iii. ≥ 3 years | < 40 years i. < 1 year - 0.876 ii. 1–3 years - 0.859 iii. ≥ 3 years - 0.643 > 40 years i. < 1 year - 0.896 ii. 1–3 years - 0.843 iii. ≥ 3 years - 0.646 | none | Reduced incidence of COPD in metformin users compared to non-users | Significantly lower risk CRC by 27% Longer use of metformin inversely proportional to CRC |
3775 underwent colonoscopy (May 2001 - March 2013) 912 with metformin 2193 non users Age > 40 years88 | Colonoscopy | Not mentioned | i. < 1 year ii. 1–2 years iii. 2–3 years iv. ≥ 3 years | Not mentioned | i. Colorectal polyp - metformin vs non users (39.4% vs 62.4%) ii. adenoma - metformin vs non users (15.2% vs 20.5%) iii. Advanced adenoma - metformin vs non users (12.2% vs 22%) | Not mentioned | Metformin is beneficial in prevention of CRC |
| 106 patients with stage IV CRC83 | 81chemotherapy 25 curative resection | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Metformin improved free survival rate for curative group (HR0.024,95% CI0.001–0.435) | i. tumor response, ii. target lesion size Chemotherapy – non-significant | Lower recurrence incidence | Metformin reduced tumor recurrence after curative resection |
8046 patient 2682 case group 5364 control group (60% male & 40% female each group) Age mean 55 and 5772 | YES | i. statins ii. insulin iii. Sulfonylurea iv. NSAIDs v.Thiazolidinedione vi. Health care adjustment | i. Intake mean and median duration − 218 days and 240 days ii. Daily dose mean and median metformin − 1500 mg | i. Multivariate model, any metformin use - 15% reduced odds of CRC (AOR 0.85, 95% CI, 0.760.95) ii. Adjustment health care + metformin - 12% reduced odds of CRC (AOR 0.88, 95% CI 0.77–1.00) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | No significant association with metformin dose, duration, or total exposure |
920 diabetic patients with CRC Age 70.2 ± 8.6 years 63.3% male, 36.7% female120 | YES | i. statins ii. insulin iii. Sulfonylurea iv. NSAIDs | Not mentioned | i. Extensive use –increased CRC risk, OR 1.43, 95% CI 1.08–1.90 ii. Significant increased risk in men, OR 1.81, 95% CI: 1.25–2.62 Ko0l | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Extensive metformin intake increased risk of CRC |
i. 675 with Type 2 DM from 1999 to 2009 ii. Age: 5 patients < 50, 269 patients between 50 and 69 and 401 patients above 70 iii. 437 males and 238 females iv. Stage I – IV of CRC119 | Within the first 6 months of exposure | i. 6 months within CRC diagnosis - 88.7% surgery 28% chemotherapy 15% radiotherapy ii.63.1% sulfonylureas iii. 23.1% insulin | Metformin used after CRC diagnosis; Follow up – i. 6 months after diagnosis until death ii. within 5 years up to 14 years | i. HR 1.06, 95% CI 0.80, 1.40 ii. | i. cancer-specific mortality ii. HbA1C levels | Lesser incidence of congestive heart disease, myocardial infarction and peripheral vascular disease | No protective association between metformin use and CRC mortality |
Fig. 1The anticancer molecular mechanisms mediated by metformin through the modulation of AMPK and cellular energy homeostasis. Metformin mainly modulates AMPK activation through LKB1 which activates and/or inactivates various downstream signalling targets such as mTOR, PTEN/PI3K-Akt, MAPKs, transcription factors (NF-κB, FOXO) and p53. The activation of these signalling pathways induce oxidative stress, apoptosis and cell cycle arrestment that inhibited formation of ACF and tumorigenesis in the colon cancer cell while suppressing cellular inflammation that is responsible to promote cell proliferation. The signalling activation or inhibition mediated by metformin is denoted by the red arrows and inhibition arrows, reversing the tumorigenesis mechanism indicated by the blue arrows