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Altered exocrine function can drive adipose wasting in early pancreatic cancer

Authors :
Carlos Fernandez-del Castillo
Naoki Takahashi
Michael H. Rosenthal
Andrew S. Liss
Brian M. Wolpin
Marisa W. Welch
Ana Babic
Karen Tai
Lauren K. Brais
Nicole E. Lopez
Allison N. Lau
Alexander Muir
Paul Jones-Sali
Matthew G. Vander Heiden
Chen Yuan
Courtney Dennis
Carla M. Prado
Jared R. Mayers
Jen Jen Yeh
Nabeel Bardeesy
Clary B. Clish
Matthew H. Kulke
Emily A Dennstedt
Motokazu Sugimoto
Justin L. Bui
Laura V. Danai
Albert C. Koong
Gloria M. Petersen
Evan C. Lien
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Malignancy is accompanied by changes in the metabolism of both cells and the organism1,2. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is associated with wasting of peripheral tissues, a metabolic syndrome that lowers quality of life and has been proposed to decrease survival of patients with cancer3,4. Tissue wasting is a multifactorial disease and targeting specific circulating factors to reverse this syndrome has been mostly ineffective in the clinic5,6. Here we show that loss of both adipose and muscle tissue occurs early in the development of pancreatic cancer. Using mouse models of PDAC, we show that tumour growth in the pancreas but not in other sites leads to adipose tissue wasting, suggesting that tumour growth within the pancreatic environment contributes to this wasting phenotype. We find that decreased exocrine pancreatic function is a driver of adipose tissue loss and that replacement of pancreatic enzymes attenuates PDAC-associated wasting of peripheral tissues. Paradoxically, reversal of adipose tissue loss impairs survival in mice with PDAC. When analysing patients with PDAC, we find that depletion of adipose and skeletal muscle tissues at the time of diagnosis is common, but is not associated with worse survival. Taken together, these results provide an explanation for wasting of adipose tissue in early PDAC and suggest that early loss of peripheral tissue associated with pancreatic cancer may not impair survival.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
558
Issue :
7711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c094959dff74aa14b5e774df79cc426