Back to Search Start Over

Clinical, Cellular, and Molecular Evidence of the Additive Antitumor Effects of Biguanides and Statins in Prostate Cancer

Authors :
Antonio C Fuentes-Fayos
Vicente Herrero-Aguayo
Manuel D. Gahete
Antonio J. León-González
Miguel López
Antonio J. Montero-Hidalgo
Elena M. Yubero-Serrano
Juan M. Jiménez-Vacas
Prudencio Sáez-Martínez
M.J. Requena-Tapia
Enrique Gómez-Gómez
Justo P. Castaño
Raúl M. Luque
Source :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism. 106(2)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Context Prostate cancer (PCa) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death among the male population worldwide. Unfortunately, current medical treatments fail to prevent PCa progression in a high percentage of cases; therefore, new therapeutic tools to tackle PCa are urgently needed. Biguanides and statins have emerged as antitumor agents for several endocrine-related cancers. Objective To evaluate: (1) the putative in vivo association between metformin and/or statins treatment and key tumor and clinical parameters and (2) the direct effects of different biguanides (metformin/buformin/phenformin), statins (atorvastatin/simvastatin/lovastatin), and their combination, on key functional endpoints and associated signalling mechanisms. Methods An exploratory/observational retrospective cohort of patients with PCa (n = 75) was analyzed. Moreover, normal and tumor prostate cells (normal [RWPE-cells/primary prostate cell cultures]; tumor [LNCaP/22RV1/PC3/DU145 cell lines]) were used to measure proliferation/migration/tumorsphere-formation/signalling pathways. Results The combination of metformin+statins in vivo was associated to lower Gleason score and longer biochemical recurrence-free survival. Moreover, biguanides and statins exerted strong antitumor actions (ie, inhibition of proliferation/migration/tumorsphere formation) on PCa cells, and that their combination further decreased; in addition, these functional parameters compared with the individual treatments. These actions were mediated through modulation of key oncogenic and metabolic signalling pathways (ie, AR/mTOR/AMPK/AKT/ERK) and molecular mediators (MKI67/cMYC/androgen receptor/cell-cycle inhibitors). Conclusions Biguanides and statins significantly reduced tumor aggressiveness in PCa, with this effect being more potent (in vitro and in vivo) when both compounds are combined. Therefore, given the demonstrated clinical safety of biguanides and statins, our results suggest a potential therapeutic role of these compounds, especially their combination, for the treatment of PCa.

Details

ISSN :
19457197
Volume :
106
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e9e380d5b008a06ad226bed0c5527028