Cancer of the Liver and its Relationship with Diabetes mellitus.
Amos Sunday OnikanniBashir LawalOluwafemi Shittu BakareBasiru Olaitan AjiboyeOluwafemi Adeleke OjoAbdullah FarasaniSaeed M KabrahGaber El-Saber BatihaCarlos Adam Conte JuniorPublished in: Technology in cancer research & treatment (2022)
A high increase witnessed in type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) globally has increasingly posed a serious threat to global increases in liver cancer with the association between diabetes mellitus type II and the survival rate in liver cancer patients showing unstable findings. An increase in the development and progression of chronic liver disease from diabetes mellitus patients may be connected to cancer of the liver with several links such as Hepatitis B and C virus and heavy consumption of alcohol. The link between T2DM patients and liver cancer is centered on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) which could be a serious threat globally if not clinically addressed. Several reports identified metformin treatment as linked to a lower risk of liver cancer prognosis while insulin treatment or sulphonylureas posed a serious threat. Mechanistically, the biological linkage between diabetes type II mellitus and liver cancer are still complex to understand with only the existence of a relationship between NAFLD and high level of energy intake and diabetes mellitus induces hepatic damage, increased liver weight thereby causes multiple pro-inflammatory cytokines that lead to the development of liver cancer. Therefore, this review gives an account of the pathophysiological importance of liver cancer position with T2DM, with the role of NAFLD as an important factor that bridges them.
Keyphrases
- glycemic control
- end stage renal disease
- type diabetes
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- papillary thyroid
- prognostic factors
- cardiovascular disease
- body mass index
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- emergency department
- dna methylation
- skeletal muscle
- genome wide
- human immunodeficiency virus
- adipose tissue
- young adults
- hepatitis c virus
- anti inflammatory
- liver fibrosis
- drug induced
- alcohol consumption
- replacement therapy