| Literature DB >> 33911195 |
Maria M Rubinstein1, Kristy A Brown2, Neil M Iyengar3.
Abstract
Obesity is a risk factor for at least 13 different types of cancer, many of which are hormonally driven, and is associated with increased cancer incidence and morbidity. Adult obesity rates are steadily increasing and a subsequent increase in cancer burden is anticipated. Obesity-related dysfunction can contribute to cancer pathogenesis and treatment resistance through various mechanisms, including those mediated by insulin, leptin, adipokine, and aromatase signalling pathways, particularly in women. Furthermore, adiposity-related changes can influence tumour vascularity and inflammation in the tumour microenvironment, which can support tumour development and growth. Trials investigating non-pharmacological approaches to target the mechanisms driving obesity-mediated cancer pathogenesis are emerging and are necessary to better appreciate the interplay between malignancy, adiposity, diet and exercise. Diet, exercise and bariatric surgery are potential strategies to reverse the cancer-promoting effects of obesity; trials of these interventions should be conducted in a scientifically rigorous manner with dose escalation and appropriate selection of tumour phenotypes and have cancer-related clinical and mechanistic endpoints. We are only beginning to understand the mechanisms by which obesity effects cell signalling and systemic factors that contribute to oncogenesis. As the rates of obesity and cancer increase, we must promote the development of non-pharmacological lifestyle trials for the treatment and prevention of malignancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33911195 PMCID: PMC8368182 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-021-01393-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Fig. 1Affects of Obesity on Insulin and Estrogen Signaling.
IR-A Insulin Receptor A, IR-B Insulin Receptor B, IGF-1 Insulin Growth Factor-1, IGF-2 Insulin Growth Factor 2, IGF-1R Insulin Growth Factor Receptor 1, SHBG Sex Hormone Binding Globulin, ER Estrogen receptor.
Fig. 2Effects of obesity on adipokine signalling.
ObR leptin binding receptor, HIF-1 hypoxia-inducible factor, TNF-alpha tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL-6 interleukin 6, TME tumor microenvironment.
Fig. 3Effects of obesity on oestrogen signalling.
AI aromatase inhibitor, GnRH gonadotropin releasing hormone, SERM selective estrogen receptor modulator (i.e; tamoxifen), SERDselectve receptor degrader (i.e.; fulvestrant), CDK4/6 cyclin dependent kinases 4 and 6 inhibitors, GPER G-coupled estrogen receptor.
Completed lifestyle randomised control trials (RCT) for cancer survivors.
| Study | Population | Intervention | BMI | Primary endpoint | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WINS | Early stage BC | Fat reduction diet | All | RFS | 9.8% vs 12.4% (HR 0.78; CI 0.60–0.98) |
| WHEL | Early stage BC | Diet | All | Recurrence rate death | 16.7% vs 16.9% (HR 0.96; CI 0.8–1.17) |
| DAMES | Mother-Daughter Dyads with early Stage BC | Diet + PA | 25–39.9 | Feasibility & weight loss | >5% weight loss in 21.7-39.1% of participants[ |
| LISA | Node negative BC | Diet + PA | 24–50 | DFS events* | 12.9% vs 18.0% (HR 0.71; CI 0.41–1.24) |
| ENERGY | Early stage BC | Diet + supervised exercise | 25–45 | Weight loss | 3.7% vs 1.3% at 24 months ( |
| LEAN | Survivors of stage 0-III BC | Diet + PA | ≥25 | Weight loss | 6.4% vs 5.4% vs 2.0%** ( |
| SUCCESS C | Her2-negative early stage BC | Diet + PA | 24–40 | DFS | No difference in DFS. HR 0.99; CI 0.76–1.28, |
| MEAL | Localized PC | Diet | All | Time to progression | No difference detected. Adjusted HR 0.97 (CI 0.76–1.25), |
| CAPS2 | Localized PC | Diet | ≥24 | PSADT*** | 28 vs 13 months, |
| SUCCEED | Stage I-II EC | Diet + PA | ≥25 | Weight loss | 1.4 kg vs −4.6 kg (CI −1.09 to 0.14), |
| RENEW | Survivors of BC, CRC, PC | Diet + PA | 25–40 | PF scale decline | −2.15 vs −4.84, |
PA physical activity, EC endometrial cancer, BC breast cancer, PF physical function, CRC colorectal cancer, PC prostate cancer, I individual arm, T team arm, PSADT prostate serum antigen doubling time, CC colon cancer, HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval.
*Loss of funding, underpowered, reporting weight loss, **in-person vs telephone vs standard care, ***study terminated after interim analysis showed futility.
Ongoing lifestyle randomised control trials (RCT) in cancer patients.
| Study | Population | Intervention | BMI | Primary endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DIANA-5[ | Early stage BC | Diet + exercise | All | Recurrence |
| PREDICOP (NCT02035631) | Early stage BC | Diet + supervised exercise | 18–40 | Time to recurrence |
| BWEL (NCT02750826) | Her2-negative early stage BC | Diet + PA | ≥27 | Invasive DFS |
| DEDiCa (NCT02786875) | Early stage BC | Diet | All | DFS |
| DIRECT (NCT02126449) | Stage II/II Her2-negative BC | Diet | ≥19 | Toxicity |
| Efficacy of Dietary Fat Reduction (NCT00002564) | Stage I/II/IIIA BC | Diet | All | DFS, OS |
| OPTITRAIN (NCT02522260) | Early stage BC | Exercise | All | Cancer-related fatigue |
| EXCAP (NCT00851812) | Early stage BC | Exercise | All | Cancer-related fatigue |
| CHALLENGE[ | Stage II/III CRC | Exercise | All | DFS |
| INTERVAL (NCT02730338) | MCRPC | Exercise | All | OS |
| REWARD (NCT01870947) | Stage I EC | Exercise | ≥30.0 | Weight change |
| Step into Wellness (NCT03367923) | Stage IA–IIIA EC | Exercise | 25–60 | Activity level |
| LIVES (NCT00719303) | Stage II–IV OC | Diet + PA | >20 | PFS |
PA physical activity, RFS relapse-free survival, PF physical functioning, OS overall survival, DFS disease-free survival, EC endometrial cancer, OC ovarian cancer, PFS progression-free survival, MCRPC metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer, CRC colorectal cancer.
Fig. 4Summary of mechanisms through which obesity promotes tumorigenesis.
HIF1α hypoxia- inducible factor 1- alpha, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, TNFα tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL-1β interleukin 1 beta, IL- 6 interleukin 6, COX-2 cyclooxygenase isoenzyme 2, IGFR- insuline-like growth factor receptor, JAK-STAT Janus kinases-signal transducer and activtor of transcription proteins, MAPK mitogen-activated protein kinase.