The most common cancer diagnosed among women worldwide is breast cancer (BC) with 60-80% belonging to the ER+BC subtype. Development of resistance is the major driver of ER+BC-related death. Well-tolerated treatments that allow concomitant targeting of the heterogeneous cancer cells are needed in order to abolish resistance. Fasting and fasting mimicking diets (FMD’s), acting in a broad way, have shown great potential to protect the healthy cells of the body during chemotherapeutic treatment, while augmenting treatment efficacy, mainly through lowered levels of blood glucose and circulating Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) availability. In ER+BC the interconnection of the ER signalling and the IGF1R signalling builds up a strong network difficult to target with specifically acting drugs. This work provides evidence that cycles of a vast acting FMD have the potential to postpone development of resistance to specific acting endocrine therapy (ET) and circumvent development of resistance to the combined treatment of ET and non ER+BC-specific drugs in vivo. FMD’s capacity to abolish resistance exists if applied at the onset and but also at later stages when insensitivity to these drugs has been acquired. Concomitant and early targeting exhibits a killing effect in vitro and in vivo, potentially on resistance driving subpopulations.
EFFECT OF FASTING MIMICKING CONDITIONS ON HORMONE THERAPY EFFICACY AND RESISTANCE ACQUISITION IN BREAST CANCER / V. Spagnolo ; supervisor: V.Longo ; added supervisor: S. Cortellino. DIPARTIMENTO DI ONCOLOGIA ED EMATO-ONCOLOGIA, 2019 Jan 28. 30. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2018. [10.13130/spagnolo-vanessa_phd2019-01-28].
EFFECT OF FASTING MIMICKING CONDITIONS ON HORMONE THERAPY EFFICACY AND RESISTANCE ACQUISITION IN BREAST CANCER
V. Spagnolo
2019
Abstract
The most common cancer diagnosed among women worldwide is breast cancer (BC) with 60-80% belonging to the ER+BC subtype. Development of resistance is the major driver of ER+BC-related death. Well-tolerated treatments that allow concomitant targeting of the heterogeneous cancer cells are needed in order to abolish resistance. Fasting and fasting mimicking diets (FMD’s), acting in a broad way, have shown great potential to protect the healthy cells of the body during chemotherapeutic treatment, while augmenting treatment efficacy, mainly through lowered levels of blood glucose and circulating Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) availability. In ER+BC the interconnection of the ER signalling and the IGF1R signalling builds up a strong network difficult to target with specifically acting drugs. This work provides evidence that cycles of a vast acting FMD have the potential to postpone development of resistance to specific acting endocrine therapy (ET) and circumvent development of resistance to the combined treatment of ET and non ER+BC-specific drugs in vivo. FMD’s capacity to abolish resistance exists if applied at the onset and but also at later stages when insensitivity to these drugs has been acquired. Concomitant and early targeting exhibits a killing effect in vitro and in vivo, potentially on resistance driving subpopulations.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
phd_unimi_R11149.pdf
Open Access dal 08/07/2020
Descrizione: Tesi dottorato completo
Tipologia:
Tesi di dottorato completa
Dimensione
106.81 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
106.81 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.