Revisão Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Metformin and blood cancers

2018; Elsevier BV; Volume: 73; Linguagem: Inglês

10.6061/clinics/2018/e412s

ISSN

1980-5322

Autores

Ademar Dantas Cunha Júnior, Fernando Vieira Pericole, José Barreto Campello Carvalheira,

Tópico(s)

Cancer-related Molecular Pathways

Resumo

Type 2 diabetes mellitus and cancer are correlated with changes in insulin signaling, a pathway that is frequently upregulated in neoplastic tissue but impaired in tissues that are classically targeted by insulin in type 2 diabetes mellitus.Many antidiabetes treatments, particularly metformin, enhance insulin signaling, but this pathway can be inhibited by specific cancer treatments.The modulation of cancer growth by metformin and of insulin sensitivity by anticancer drugs is so common that this phenomenon is being studied in hundreds of clinical trials on cancer.Many meta-analyses have consistently shown a moderate but direct effect of body mass index on the incidence of multiple myeloma and lymphoma and the elevated risk of leukemia in adults.Moreover, new epidemiological and preclinical studies indicate metformin as a therapeutic agent in patients with leukemia, lymphomas, and multiple myeloma.In this article, we review current findings on the anticancer activities of metformin and the underlying mechanisms from preclinical and ongoing studies in hematologic malignancies.

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