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Targeting the Supply Lines of Cancer-A Possible Strategy for Combating the Disease?

Journal

ANTICANCER RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages 2737-2744

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/anticanres.15055

Keywords

Cancer; metabolism; survival; amino acids; glucose; review

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Cancer cells increase metabolic activity to meet their energy demands, leading to a need for building materials like glucose and amino acids. Investigating the supply lines of these materials in the blood may offer therapeutic opportunities targeting the thermodynamic foundation of cancer. Understanding how these metabolic supply lines affect survival and metastasis in cancer patients could provide insights for potential interventions.
Cancer cells alter and up-regulate their metabolic activity in order to facilitate the increased demands of malignancy. This leads to an increased need for metabolic building materials, for example glucose and amino acids. The blood circulation represents the principal supply lines delivering these materials. It, therefore, becomes relevant to investigate if these supply lines-in terms of the concentrations of building materials in the blood-may exhibit a therapeutic window and could be intervened, as they deliver the most basal components required to exert malignant functioning. A key aspect in this strategy is that it targets-in theory-the thermodynamic foundation enabling the activities that, essentially, make a cancer a cancer. As an initial step, this review examines if the metabolic supply lines carry clinical implications; specifically, if they impact survival and the development of metastases in patients with cancer. Furthermore, it presents and discusses perspectives on potentially targeting these supply lines.

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