Diabetes mellitus and metformin in hepatocellular carcinoma.

World J Gastroenterol

Koji Fujita, Hisaaki Miyoshi, Joji Tani, Kyoko Oura, Tomoko Tadokoro, Teppei Sakamoto, Takako Nomura, Asahiro Morishita, Hirohito Yoneyama, Tsutomu Masaki, Department of Gastroenterology and Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Kagawa University, Kagawa 760-8521, Japan.

Published: July 2016

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Diabetes mellitus, a risk factor for cancer, is also globally endemic. The clinical link between these two diseases has been the subject of investigation for a century, and diabetes mellitus has been established as a risk factor for HCC. Accordingly, metformin, a first-line oral anti-diabetic, was first proposed as a candidate anti-cancer agent in 2005 in a cohort study in Scotland. Several subsequent large cohort studies and randomized controlled trials have not demonstrated significant efficacy for metformin in suppressing HCC incidence and mortality in diabetic patients; however, two recent randomized controlled trials have reported positive data for the tumor-preventive potential of metformin in non-diabetic subjects. The search for biological links between cancer and diabetes has revealed intracellular pathways that are shared by cancer and diabetes. The signal transduction mechanisms by which metformin suppresses carcinogenesis in cell lines or xenograft tissues and improves chemoresistance in cancer stem cells have also been elucidated. This review addresses the clinical and biological links between HCC and diabetes mellitus and the anti-cancer activity of metformin in clinical studies and basic experiments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4945972PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v22.i27.6100DOI Listing

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