Litcius/Paper detail

Decoding the obesity–cancer connection: lessons from preclinical models of pancreatic adenocarcinoma

Christian Ruiz, Cathy Garcia, Jeremy B. Jacox, Lauren Lawres, Mandar D. Muzumdar

2023Life Science Alliance14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Obesity is a metabolic state of energy excess and a risk factor for over a dozen cancer types. Because of the rising worldwide prevalence of obesity, decoding the mechanisms by which obesity promotes tumor initiation and early progression is a societal imperative and could broadly impact human health. Here, we review results from preclinical models that link obesity to cancer, using pancreatic adenocarcinoma as a paradigmatic example. We discuss how obesity drives cancer development by reprogramming the pretumor or tumor cell and its micro- and macro-environments. Specifically, we describe evidence for (1) altered cellular metabolism, (2) hormone dysregulation, (3) inflammation, and (4) microbial dysbiosis in obesity-driven pancreatic tumorigenesis, denoting variables that confound interpretation of these studies, and highlight remaining gaps in knowledge. Recent advances in preclinical modeling and emerging unbiased analytic approaches will aid in further unraveling the complex link between obesity and cancer, informing novel strategies for prevention, interception, and therapy in pancreatic adenocarcinoma and other obesity-associated cancers.

Topics & Concepts

Pancreatic cancerCancerObesityCarcinogenesisAdenocarcinomaMedicineBioinformaticsCancer preventionCancer researchOncologyInternal medicineBiologyPancreatic and Hepatic Oncology ResearchPancreatitis Pathology and TreatmentImmune cells in cancer