Lonardo et al. Metab Target Organ Damage 2022;2:8
DOI: 10.20517/mtod.2022.05
Metabolism and
Target Organ Damage
Review
Open Access
Metabolism and cancer-select topics
Fulvio Lonardo, Casem Ballouk
Department of Pathology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Harper University Hospital and Karmanos Cancer
Institute, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Correspondence to: Fulvio Lonardo MD, Department of Pathology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Harper
University Hospital and Karmanos Cancer Institute, 39990 John R St Detroit, Detroit, MI 48201, USA. E-mail:
flonardo@med.wayne.edu
How to cite this article: Lonardo F, Ballouk C. Metabolism and cancer-select topics. Metab Target Organ Damage 2022;2:8.
https://dx.doi.org/10.20517/mtod.2022.05
Received: 28 Jan 2022 First Decision: 1 Mar 2022 Revised: 11 Apr 2022 Accepted: 22 Apr 2022 Published: 6 May 2022
Academic Editor: Sonia M. Najjar Copy Editor: Jia-Xin Zhang Production Editor: Jia-Xin Zhang
Abstract
Metabolism and cancer intersect in multiple ways. Cancer has unique metabolic properties, including an inordinate
reliance on anaerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect). From an evolutionary standpoint, increased cancer incidence
is associated with increased metabolic rates across species. Epidemiological data prove that a group of overlapping
metabolic alterations, including obesity, type 2 diabetes Mellitus, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and metabolic
syndrome, constitute predisposing risk factors for cancer development in multiple anatomical sites. The molecular
pathways underpinning this association involve hyperinsulinemia, hyperglycemia, sex hormones, adipokines,
chronic inflammation, oxidative stress, and altered immune response.
Keywords: Cancer, metabolism, type 2 diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), obesity
INTRODUCTION
The existence of an association between metabolic alterations and cancer is multifaceted. Cancer cells have
long been known to have unique metabolic properties, including a preference for aerobic glycolysis (the socalled Warburg effect). Yet, an association between obesity, type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), their
associated and partly overlapping metabolic syndrome (MetS), and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
(NAFLD) and cancer development has also been unveiled relatively recently. Since these diseases have a
high prevalence, which is expected to rise even further in the near future[1], this association is likely to
© The Author(s) 2022. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, sharing,
adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, for any purpose, even commercially, as
long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and
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continue to exact a high toll in terms of financial and human burden for years to come. However, the extent
of this association remains poorly appreciated, even among physicians, and its molecular basis is
incompletely understood.s
METHODS
We searched Pub med data base using the key words ([“metabolism”], [“obesity”], [“diabetes”], [“NAFLD”],
[“Met S”], [calorie restriction], [“bariatric surgery”], [“hyperinsulinemia”], [“hyperglycemia’], [“exercise”],
[“adipokines”], [“metformin”]) and [“cancer]; [“Warburg effect”].
AIMS
In this review, we endeavored to cover select topics relating to metabolism and cancer with the following
aims: (1) provide a general biological frame of reference for the topic; (2) sketch out the main
epidemiological and clinical data proving this association; (3) identify molecular pathways that underpin it
and that point to future lines of research. Outside the scope of this study are changes induced in the host by
cancer, the most notable of which is cancer cachexia[2].
Cancer has unique metabolic features: the Warburg effect
Warburg and Cory demonstrated in the 1920s that cancer cells have high rates of glucose uptake and of
conversion of glucose to lactate and bypass mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, even in the presence
of oxygen. This phenomenon, also called aerobic glycolysis, has been consistently confirmed by modern
studies[3].
Increased glucose uptake by malignant tumors, mediated by increased levels of transporters, notably GLUT1[4] constitutes the biological basis for the use of positive emission tomography scans, after the
administration of radiolabeled glucose tracer, in the detection of malignancy. This metabolic abnormality is
regarded as one of the fundamental hallmarks of cancer[5].
Further proof of the principle of the crucial role of energy metabolism in the development of cancer is
constituted by the occurrence of mutations in succinate dehydrogenase in pheochromocytomas and
paragangliomas[3] and isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 in adult glioblastomas[6]. However, it is currently
appreciated that, when it comes to energy metabolism, tumors are more heterogeneous and flexible than
originally appreciated and are also capable of oxidative phosphorylation[3].
The biological rationale for the Warburg effect and for its selection by cancer cells remains unclear.
Proposed mechanisms include the satisfaction of increased energy requirements of tumor cells by the quick
generation of ATP and the generation of NADPH and NADH for the de novo synthesis of lipids and
nucleotides[7].
It has also been noted that high levels of lactate in the tumor microenvironment as a consequence of the
Warburg effect inhibit cytotoxic immune cells while leaving T-reg lymphocytes unaffected, thus effectively
dampening the antineoplastic activity of the immune system[8,9]. Another proposed consequence of the
Warburg effect is the direct promotion of growth at the transcriptional level, secondary to the chromatin
remodeling induced by histone acetylation[10-12] as a consequence of increased Acetyl CoA levels[13].
It is currently believed that multiple metabolic alterations characterize cancer cells and represent both the
basis for possible novel tumor classification schemes and novel treatment modalities. This topic is covered
in depth in other papers[14] and remains beyond the scope of this review.
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Metabolism modulates the risk of cancer development and progression
Several lines of evidence point to a relation between metabolism and cancer development.
Peto’s paradox.
The current model of cancer development postulates that cancer arises from the accumulation of mutations
in key genes that are crucial in the development and progression of malignant cell clones, such as those
controlling cell growth and tissue invasion. Richard Peto made seminal observations on carcinogenesis,
pointing out that the probability of cancer development is proportional to the length of exposure to
carcinogens, as it is to be expected if the probability of carcinogen-induced mutation were a stochastic
event. Based on this model, it would be expected that an increased number of cells would result in higher
cancer incidence, by increasing the number of possible targets of mutagenic agents. Paradoxically, Peto
noted that, across species, an increased organ size does not only result in an increased cancer incidence but
in a lower incidence[15,16].
Different explanations exist for this paradox. One is the evolution of increased cancer suppressor
mechanisms in larger animals. Elephants, for instance, that are known to have a very low cancer incidence,
are endowed with multiple copies of the tumor suppressor gene p53[15,16]. Another explanation, which does
not exclude the first but could constitute a compounding risk factor, is that a direct relationship exists
between cancer incidence and metabolic rate, and both are comparatively higher in smaller than in larger
animals[16,17].
The discovery of the relationship between metabolic rate and body size is credited to Kleiber, who observed
in the 1930s that per unit of body weight, smaller animals have a much higher basic metabolic rate than
larger animals[16,17] (a historical perspective of the topic is provided by Niklas et al.[18]). Indeed, a large
European prospective study including ~140,000 men and 317,000 women found an association between
increased metabolic rate and increased risk of multiple cancer types, independent of obesity[19]. This
phenomenon has been linked to an increased mutagenic rate resulting from higher basic metabolic rates,
mediated by by-products of metabolism[16].
The finding that calorie restriction, which results in a reduced basic metabolic rate[20], is linked to reduced
cancer incidence (further discussed in section IV) appears to corroborate this hypothesis[21,22]. This reduced
cancer incidence has been linked to inhibition of mTOR, since pharmacological or (in transgenic mice)
knockout of mTOR is linked to prolonged lifespan. Presumably, decreased energy demands reduce
mitochondrial activity. In support of this hypothesis is the fact that metformin also inhibits mitochondrial
activity[16].
The association between higher cancer risk and obesity appears paradoxical, based on the assumption that
obesity is linked to a reduced basic metabolic rate[23]. Obesity is associated with higher energy
expenditure[24]. However, it is not clear whether the basic metabolic rate in obesity, when adjusted for fatfree mass is reduced. Although some studies do show a reduced basic metabolic rate associated with higher
BMI[25], most studies do not confirm this finding[26], and some studies show an increased basic metabolic rate
in obesity[27,23]. Methodological differences may be, at least in part, responsible for these differences.
Some studies show that physical activity may increase basic metabolic rate, secondary to increased energy
expenditure and increased fat-free mass[28,29], which in turn is associated with reduced cancer risk (discussed
later). However, some studies have failed to show a similar effect after long-term training[30]. Thus, the
relation between physical activity and basal metabolic rate is complex. The validity of an additive model,
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which postulates a direct and linear correlation between energy expenditure and metabolism, has been
questioned. A constrained total energy expenditure model has been proposed[31], which envisions an
increase of energy expenditure with physical activity at low activity, and a plateau at a higher activity level,
with the adaptation of the basic metabolic rate to maintain total energy expenditure within a narrow range.
Many data support this model, including the fact that long-term exercise may cause a reduction of the basic
metabolic rate in humans[32] and the fact that African hunter-gatherers have the same energy expenditure as
westerners who live a sedentary life[31]. Animal models have further shown that the body maintains constant
energy expenditures in response to increased physical activity, by reducing growth, basic metabolic rate, and
lactation, even at the cost of cannibalizing nursing offspring[32].
Obesity
Calle et al.[33], in their seminal prospective study of > 900,000 US adults, found obesity (defined as a BMI >
40) to confer a 52% higher mortality for malignancy to men and 62% to women, compared with individuals
of normal weight. Malignant tumors involved were cancers of the esophagus, colorectum, liver, gallbladder,
pancreas, and kidney, non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and multiple myeloma (MM). Obesity was a
significant risk factor overall in ~5%-20% of tumors, with the lowest risks found in the presence of smoking,
the higher in its absence[33].
It has been further shown that specific histological types of cancers are associated with increased BMI. So,
the rate of Estrogen Receptor and Progesterone Receptor (ER and PR)+, but not ER and PR- and Er+ and
Pr- breast cancers is increased in patients with increased BMI. Similarly, patients in the highest quartile of
BMI, in a large Swedish cohort had a higher incidence of grade 2, low proliferative rate, Er α (not Er β), and
PR+ Her2- tumors[34]. In addition, obesity is inversely associated with premenopausal and directly with
postmenopausal breast cancer[35]. Increased BMI is associated with increased incidence of papillary thyroid
carcinoma and cardias but not non-cardias adenocarcinomas of the stomach and of endometrial
adenocarcinoma, endometrioid type (type I endometrial cancer)[34].
In a meta-analysis studying, the cancer burden attributable to increased BMI (defined as ≥ 25 kg/m2) in 30
European countries, the population attributable risk was 2.5 and 4% for men and women, respectively, with
65% of cancers represented by endometrial, postmenopausal breast and colorectal cancer[36]. This study
confirmed the association with increased BMI of cancers of the colo-rectum, gallbladder, esophagus
(adenocarcinoma), kidney, endometrium and postmenopausal breast, NHL, MM and also found an
increased risk for prostate cancer and MM. The same authors found, in a meta-analysis of 221 prospective
data sets, including 282,137 individuals, that, in men, a 5 Kg/m2 increase in BMI was strongly associated
with esophageal adenocarcinoma, thyroid, colon, and kidney cancer; in women with endometrial,
gallbladder and esophageal adenocarcinoma. A weaker association was found for rectal cancer and
malignant melanoma in men, postmenopausal breast cancer, thyroid pancreatic and colon cancer in women
and, in both genders, leukemia, multiple myeloma, and NHL[36]. This study highlights that gender
differences modulate the risk of BMI-associated malignancy and that the associations are incremental per 5
Kg/m2 increases in weight and broadly consistent across geographic differences, pointing to an etiological,
rather than incidental relation between the two conditions.
In the case of prostate cancer, the association with obesity is quite nuanced and exemplifies how global
epidemiological data need to be examined in great detail to allow for all the clinical and pathological
variables of the disease to be accounted for [Table 1]. Prostate cancer’s incidence is much higher than its
overall mortality[37]. The realization of such disparity is indeed the basis for an “active surveillance” approach
to this disease, relying on the identification of tumors that most likely will behave aggressively, based on
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Table 1. Association of cancer with obesity and T2D can be complex and histotype specific
Obesity
[35]
↓ Premenopausal breast cancer
[35]
↑ Post menopausal breast cancer
[34]
Er, Pr + breast cancer
[34]
Cardias adenocarcinoma
[34]
Type I Endometrial Cancer
↓ Overall Prostate cancer incidence
↑ Prostate cancer aggressiveness
[58,148]
[39,148-153]
T2DM
↓ Prostate cancer incidence
[58]
histological grading at biopsy, PSA value, and estimated tumor size[38]. Many studies found that high BMI is
associated with an increased incidence of exactly those subsets of prostate cancers that have higher
aggressiveness[39]. Dickerman et al.[40] likewise found an association between increases in visceral fat and
thigh subcutaneous fat and the risk of advanced and fatal disease.
Not surprisingly, NAFLD and nonalcoholic Steato Hepatitis (NASH), which are tightly related to obesity
and to the MetS[41], also confer an increased risk of malignancy for cancers of the esophagus, stomach,
pancreas, colon, thyroid, lung, urinary tract, female genital tract[41,42], and liver[43].
An apparent exception to the association existing between cancer and obesity exists for lung cancer, since a
negative correlation exists between BMI and lung cancer’s incidence and mortality[44-47]. This apparent
paradox is explained by a retrospective study of 513 resected non-small cell lung cancer, showing an
association between visceral fat (determined by CT scan) and increased aggressiveness for these limitedstage tumors[48]. Similarly, a higher waist circumference has been found to correlate with an increased risk of
lung cancer[49,50] and visceral adipose tissue with a worse prognosis in patients undergoing chemotherapy[50].
An association between visceral adiposity and cancer incidence and/or prognosis has been unveiled in other
organs as well. In a cohort of 106 patients, Iwase et al.[51] found that breast cancer patients in the upper
tertile for upper body obesity had shorter disease-free survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In a cohort
of 1257 hepatocellular carcinoma patients, a high ratio of visceral to subcutaneous fat (assessed by CT scans)
predicted increased mortality, independent of cancer stage and Child-Pugh class, and by multivariate
analysis, this association was found to be independent of BMI[52]. Donkers et al.[53] found in a cohort of 176
patients with high-grade endometrial cancer, that high visceral fat constituted an independent predictor of
poor prognosis in type II (non-endometrioid-type) cancers.
Many studies specifically link visceral adiposity to the incidence and prognosis of colon cancer. Lee et al.[54]
studied a cohort of 1290 postmenopausal women with colon cancer, matched with 670 postmenopausal
women without colon cancer that had undergone a screening colonoscopy. After identifying a study cohort
that included a group of 199 pairs of colon cancer-healthy Korean patients, well balanced for BMI and
smoking status, patients with visceral adiposity volumes in the 67th percentile or higher had an increased
incidence of colorectal cancer[54]
Park et al.[55] demonstrated in a cohort of 472 stage III colorectal cancer patients, that both higher visceral to
total adipose tissue (VT) and visceral to subcutaneous adipose tissue ratios were associated with poor
survival and that a higher VT at the L3-L4 level was associated with a higher risk of peritoneal seeding and
tumor recurrence. In a review of 4722 NAFLD patients, Allen et al.[56] found that NAFLD was associated
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with an increased risk of hepatic and non-hepatic cancers, prompting the hypothesis that “the presence of
NAFLD works as a reliable marker of predominantly visceral obesity”[57].
These collective data paint a more nuanced scenario of the interaction between obesity and cancer, pointing
out that the anatomical pattern of fat distribution and particularly, the extent of accumulation of visceral fat
plays an important role in this association.
T2DM
T2DM confers an increased risk for the development of endometrial cancer, intrahepatic
cholangiocarcinoma, colon, liver, pancreas, and breast cancer[58]. In a large prospective study, Saydah et al.[59]
using a cohort of close to 23,000 patients, found that patients within the highest quartile of HbA1c had a
higher risk for colorectal cancer; a similar association with glycalbumin was also found by others[60]. An
increased risk for colorectal cancer was identified in a meta-analysis by Yukhara, independent of other risk
factors, i.e., smoking, obesity, and physical exercise[61].
The risk of prostate cancer is decreased by T2DM[58] [Table 1], a fact possibly explained by the lower
androgen levels associated with T2DM, resulting in reduced stimulation of androgen receptor sensitive
prostate cancer cells[58].
In a meta-analysis, Zhu et al.[62] found including 2.2 million patients, that DM is associated with a reduction
in survival at 5 years ranging from 16% to 19% respectively for colorectal, colonic and rectal cancers.
Interestingly, some authors have found that T2DM confers to women a higher risk of colorectal cancer than
men[63]. This finding constitutes yet another example of the ability of gender to modulate the biology of
human diseases[64]. An association between the MetS and colon cancer was also found by Esposito[65]. In a
series of 258 patients, Trabulo et al.[66] found an association between the MetS and adenomas and colorectal
cancer.
Both long-term and new onset (< 3 years) T2DM increase the risk of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma[67].
T2DM and the Met S confer an increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma, (HCC), thought to be secondary
to NAFLD and particularly to NASH, which is blunted by metformin[68,69].
An increased risk for gastric cancer in patients with T2DM has been described in most studies and deemed
to be secondary to hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia, as well as an increased propensity to develop
persistent H. pylori infection. Interestingly this effect appears to be more marked in women and in Asian
populations[70].
Targeting metabolism to reduce cancer risk
Additional proof of the principle of the etiological relationship existing between increased BMI T2DM and,
at large, the Met S and cancer is provided by the beneficial effect of therapeutic interventions and lifestyle
changes in reducing such risk.
Bariatric surgery
A. Swedish prospective study showed that bariatric surgery reduces cancer incidence[71]. This reduction
appears limited to women and involves predominantly cancers thought to be hormone-mediated, i.e.,
endometrial and postmenopausal breast. It has been speculated that this lack of association for men may be
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due to the different types of tumors linked to obesity in men and women and differences in follow-up times
needed to demonstrate an association for different cancer types[72]. The ability of bariatric surgery to reduce
cancer incidence was confirmed in a recent meta-analysis[73].
B. Physical exercise
B1. Exercise prevents cancer development: epidemiological evidence.
Physical activity reduces the incidence of cancers of the bladder, breast, colon, endometrium, esophagus
(adenocarcinoma), kidney, and stomach, with relative risk reductions ranging from 10% to 20%[74-77].
Interestingly, physical activity reduces mortality even when started after diagnosis, in cancers of the
colon[78,79] and breast[75,80]. While this reduction may be secondary to reduced incidence of cardiovascular
events[81], there is experimental evidence that physical activity directly affects tumor biology.
B2. Exercise reduces cancer incidence and improves prognosis: experimental evidence. Experimental
models have shown in rodents that exercise reduces the development and progression of cancer[82,83].
Pre-incubation with the serum of exercise-conditioned animals reduces the clonogenic potential of cancer
cells in vitro and their tumorigenicity in vivo[84-87] and increases the efficacy of chemotherapy[87,88]. These
effects have been linked to multiple effects, including decreased EGF and increased IGF-1 Binding Protein 1
(which modulates the bioavailability of IGF-1)[86] and normalization of vascular supply[87,88], via modulation
of the VEGF pathway and increased thromobospondin 1[88]. In a mice model of hepatic carcinogenesis, the
number of hepatic dysplastic foci and cancers induced by Diethylnitrosamine was drastically reduced by
physical exercise in genetically modified, obese, insulin-resistant mice, thus proving that the antineoplastic
effect of exercise is independent of weight control[89].
C. Diet
It is known that a diet rich in vegetables, fresh fruit, and whole grains while poor in red meat has a
protective effect against cancer. However, it is unclear to what extent this protective effect is independent of
its protective effect against the development of T2DM and increased BMI[90].
D. Calorie restriction
An abundance of nutrients promotes cell proliferation, while a lack of nutrients activates pathways
protecting against oxidative stress[91,92]. In S. Cerevisiae, lack of nutrients is associated with increased
resistance to oxidative stress and increased life span[93]. In eukaryotic organisms, calorie restriction increases
lifespan and reduces the incidence of chronic diseases, including cancer[91,94,95]. This anti-cancer effect may be
modulated by the type of calorie restriction, i.e., intermittent vs. chronic and may vary in chemical vs.
transgenic models of cancer[95]. In animal models, calorie restriction also increases the efficacy of
chemotherapy[91]. The anti-cancer activity of calorie restriction is thought to be mediated by the
Insulin/IGF-1 pathway, leptins and adiponectin[96].
E. Medical management of T2DM
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Metformin treatment, compared to other glucose-lowering treatments[97,98], has been particularly associated
with reduced cancer risk and mortality in many organs, in most[99-104], but not all studies[105,106].
The protective effect metformin has on the development of hepatocellular carcinoma has been causally
linked to the reduction in hepatic accumulation of fatty acids, inhibition of oxidative damage, and cancerinhibiting changes induced in the immune system, including CD8 lymphocytes[68].
Molecular underpinnings
Hyperinsulinemia
Hyperinsulinemia is associated with increased risks of breast, colorectal, pancreatic and endometrial
cancer[107,108]. Insulin levels in diabetic patients are tightly linked to the duration of the disease and
treatment[109]. In a large study, hyperinsulinemia was associated with a doubling of cancer mortality,
independent of obesity[109].
Cancer promoting effect of hyperinsulinemia is thought to be mediated primarily by increased levels of
IGF-1, which are caused by increased levels of IGF-1 binding proteins, since IGF-1 has higher growthpromoting activity of insulin[107]. Several lines of evidence, including the increased incidence of colon cancer
in patients with acromegaly, point to IGF-1 as a key factor in the development of colon cancer[110]. In
addition, in transgenic mice with hyperinsulinemia, implanted breast tumors have increased
aggressiveness[107]. Severe IGF-1 deficiency, linked to growth hormone receptor inactivating mutations,
results in reduced cancer incidence in patients with the Laron syndrome[111,112]. In addition, in transgenic
mice with hyperinsulinemia, implanted breast tumors have increased aggressiveness[107].
Hyperglycemia
Hyperglycemia modulates multiple pathways that are crucial to cancer development and progression. These
include: (1) cell proliferation; (2) invasion; (3) apoptosis; (4) inflammation; (5) chemotherapy resistance.
Hyperglycemia stimulates cell proliferation in vitro in breast[113] and pancreatic cancer[114] cell lines, possibly
secondary to repression of p21 and SMAD4[115]. It promotes invasion and migration through STAT3[116],
Heme Oxygenase -1, via upregulation of the TGFβ 1/PI3K/Akt pathway[117], TGFβ secretion[118,119], inhibition
of metalloproteinases MMP2 and MMP9[120], increased production of u-PA[121], and upregulation of
superoxide dismutase, resulting in activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase and the mitogenactivated protein kinases (MAPK)[122,123].
Hyperglycemia affects apoptosis via the p53 pathway, reducing p53 activity, by reducing its phosphorylation
on Serine 46[124] or p53 levels, via the HIPK2 protein[125].
Hyperglycemia promotes an inflammatory state via cytokines, such as TNFα, IFNγ and Il-6[126]. Interestingly
the same cytokines are also involved in insulin resistance[127]. Hyperglycemia is linked to chemotherapy
resistance in multiple tumor cell lines in vitro[128-131]. This effect is associated with reduced apoptosis in
prostate cancer cells after docetaxel treatment[130].
Sex hormones
One of the tumors where the etiologic association between increased BMI and cancer development is best
understood at the molecular level is endometrial cancer.
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Increased estrogen stimulation is regarded as the principal factor promoting the development of type I
endometrial cancer and its precursor lesion, atypical endometrial hyperplasia/Endometrial Intraepithelial
Neoplasia[132]. By multivariate analysis, endometrial cancer appears to be linked predominantly to increased
BMI, rather than diabetes[132]. In postmenopausal women, the main source of estrogen is the adipose tissue,
where aromatase converts androgens to estrogens. A reduction in levels of sex hormone-binding globulin
induced by obesity and mediated by adipokines, further increases levels of bioactive estrogen[133-134].
Estrogen, upon binding to its receptors α and β, stimulates proliferation, rendering cells more amenable to
accumulating mutations and affecting the transcription of genes involved in differentiation, apoptosis, and
angiogenesis[135]. Considering that up to 40% of endometrial cancers arise in the setting of mismatch repair
enzyme deficiency, as a result of somatic and less commonly inherited mutations (i.e., in the Lynch
syndrome)[132], a pro-mutagenic vicious cycle is created.
Adipokines
In obesity, there are increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL6, TNFα, and PAI, and
reduced levels of beneficial mediators, such as adiponectin, which can be secreted directly by adipose cells
or by fat-infiltrating inflammatory cells[34].
Adiponectin levels are inversely correlated with BMI, cancer incidence, and stage. Adiponectin has
antiapoptotic activity, stimulating p53 and Bax expression and reducing Bcl-2 expression[34]. Low levels of
adiponectin are associated with higher risks of the breast[136-138] and endometrial cancer[139-140], and in men,
colorectal cancer[141].
Leptin is produced by adipocytes and breast cancer cells. Leptin deficiency caused by homozygous
inactivation in humans and in mice models causes hyperphagia and obesity, which is reverted by leptin
administration[142]. However, obese subjects with normal leptin genes show a much less dramatic response,
secondary to the occurrence of leptin resistance (142). Leptin acts at different levels, modulating cell
proliferation, apoptosis, angiogenesis, and ER signaling[143].
Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress
Obesity and energy accumulation are associated with a low-grade inflammatory state, highlighted by
increased levels of C-reactive protein[144] and this creates a milieu promoting cancer development.
Contrariwise, calorie restriction reduces chronic inflammation[145].
Immune response
Obese patients have lower NK activity[146]. In an in vivo model obesity, caused by high fat diet in mice,
resulted in accelerated growth of implanted tumors. This effect was more pronounced for implanted tumors
with higher immunogenicity and was caused by a reduction in the tumor infiltrating lymphocytes and
particularly, CD8 cells[147].
CONCLUSIONS
In summary, strong evidence links the development of multiple cancer types to T2DM and obesity and their
associated and partially overlapping conditions Mets and NAFLD. This association is mediated by
molecular pathways affecting multiple aspects of cancer biology. Medical management and/or prevention of
these dysmetabolic conditions have the added benefit of reducing the excess cancer incidence and mortality
with which they are associated.
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DECLARATIONS
Authors’ contributions
Designed, wrote and edited the manuscript: Lonardo F
Provided assisteancer in managing references: Ballouk C
Availability of data and materials
All the data provided in the manuscript were taken from papers identified through a MedLine search or
books.
Financial support and sponsorship
None.
Conflicts of interest
All authors declared that there are no conflicts of interest.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2022.
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