A precision medicine approach to metabolic therapy for breast cancer in mice.
Ngozi D AkingbesoteAaron NormanWanling ZhuAlexandra A HalberstamXinyi ZhangJulia FoldiMaryam B LustbergRachel J PerryPublished in: Communications biology (2022)
Increasing evidence highlights approaches targeting metabolism as potential adjuvants to cancer therapy. Sodium-glucose transport protein 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors are the newest class of antihyperglycemic drugs. To our knowledge, SGLT2 inhibitors have not been applied in the neoadjuvant setting as a precision medicine approach for this devastating disease. Here, we treat lean breast tumor-bearing mice with the SGLT2 inhibitor dapagliflozin as monotherapy and in combination with paclitaxel chemotherapy. We show that dapagliflozin enhances the efficacy of paclitaxel, reducing tumor glucose uptake and prolonging survival. Further, the ability of dapagliflozin to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy correlates with its effect to reduce circulating insulin in some but not all breast tumors. Our data suggest a genetic signature for breast tumors more likely to respond to dapagliflozin in combination with paclitaxel. In the current study, tumors driven by mutations upstream of canonical insulin signaling pathways responded to this combined treatment, whereas tumors driven by mutations downstream of canonical insulin signaling did not. These data demonstrate that dapagliflozin enhances the response to chemotherapy in mice with breast cancer and suggest that patients with driver mutations upstream of canonical insulin signaling may be most likely to benefit from this neoadjuvant approach.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- type diabetes
- cancer therapy
- rectal cancer
- high fat diet induced
- glycemic control
- chemotherapy induced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- signaling pathway
- electronic health record
- healthcare
- radiation therapy
- big data
- drug delivery
- randomized controlled trial
- wild type
- blood glucose
- machine learning
- clinical trial
- combination therapy
- copy number
- genome wide
- young adults
- blood pressure
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- oxidative stress
- body composition
- amino acid
- binding protein
- pi k akt
- breast cancer risk
- protein protein
- free survival