Obesity-Specific improvement of lung cancer outcomes and immunotherapy efficacy with metformin.

IF 9.9 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Randall J Smith, Robert Zollo, Sukumar Kalvapudi, Yeshwanth Vedire, Akhil Goud Pachimatla, Cara Petrucci, Garrison Shaller, Deschana Washington, Vethanayagam Rr, Stephanie N Sass, Aravind Srinivasan, Eric Kannisto, Sawyer Bawek, Prantesh Jain, Spencer Rosario, Joseph Barbi, Sai Yendamuri
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Abstract

Background: Pre-clinical cancer studies ascribe promising anticancer properties to metformin. Yet, clinical findings vary, casting uncertainty on its therapeutic value for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. We hypothesized that metformin could benefit obese and overweight patients with NSCLC.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed two clinical cohorts and employed complementary mouse models to test our hypothesis. One cohort included NSCLC patients with overweight BMI (≥25, n = 511) and non-overweight BMI (<25, n = 232) who underwent lobectomy, evaluating metformin's impact on clinical outcomes. Another cohort examined metformin's effect on progression-free survival (PFS) after immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) in overweight (n = 284) vs non-overweight (n = 184) NSCLC patients. Metformin's effects on tumor progression, antitumor immunity, and ICI response in obese and normal-weight mice were assessed with lung cancer models.

Results: Metformin is associated with increased recurrence-free survival in overweight patients (HR = 0.47 [95%CI = 0.24-0.94], p = .035) after lobectomy. It also corrected accelerated tumor growth in diet-induced obese mouse models in a lymphocyte-specific manner while reversing several mechanisms of immune suppression potentiated by obesity. PD-1 blockade coupled with metformin was more effective at limiting tumor burden in obese mice and correlated with PFS only in overweight patients on immunotherapy (HR = 0.60, [95%CI = 0.39-0.93], p = .024).

Conclusions: Metformin may improve lung cancer-specific clinical outcomes in obese and overweight lung cancer patients and enhance immunotherapy efficacy in this growing population as well. This work identifies obesity as a potential predictive biomarker of metformin's anticancer and immunotherapy-enhancing properties in lung cancer while shedding light on the underlying immunological phenomena.

肥胖症特异性改善肺癌预后和二甲双胍的免疫疗法疗效。
背景:临床前癌症研究认为二甲双胍具有良好的抗癌特性。然而,临床研究结果各不相同,因此二甲双胍对非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)患者的治疗价值并不确定。我们假设二甲双胍可使肥胖和超重的非小细胞肺癌患者受益:我们回顾性地分析了两个临床队列,并采用互补的小鼠模型来验证我们的假设。一个队列包括体重指数(BMI)超重(≥25,n = 511)和非超重(BMI)的NSCLC患者:二甲双胍与超重患者肺叶切除术后无复发生存率的提高有关(HR = 0.47 [95%CI = 0.24-0.94], p = .035)。它还能以淋巴细胞特异性方式纠正饮食诱导的肥胖小鼠模型中肿瘤的加速生长,同时逆转因肥胖而加剧的免疫抑制机制。PD-1阻断与二甲双胍联用可更有效地限制肥胖小鼠的肿瘤负荷,并且仅与接受免疫疗法的超重患者的PFS相关(HR = 0.60, [95%CI = 0.39-0.93], p = .024):结论:二甲双胍可改善肥胖和超重肺癌患者的肺癌特异性临床预后,并提高这一日益增长人群的免疫疗法疗效。这项工作确定了肥胖是二甲双胍在肺癌中抗癌和提高免疫治疗效果的潜在预测生物标志物,同时揭示了潜在的免疫学现象。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
17.00
自引率
2.90%
发文量
203
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the National Cancer Institute is a reputable publication that undergoes a peer-review process. It is available in both print (ISSN: 0027-8874) and online (ISSN: 1460-2105) formats, with 12 issues released annually. The journal's primary aim is to disseminate innovative and important discoveries in the field of cancer research, with specific emphasis on clinical, epidemiologic, behavioral, and health outcomes studies. Authors are encouraged to submit reviews, minireviews, and commentaries. The journal ensures that submitted manuscripts undergo a rigorous and expedited review to publish scientifically and medically significant findings in a timely manner.
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