PDA

View Full Version : Diabetes drug might fight cancer



Fredkc
10th September 2010, 12:46
I just love news that my sinful wasteful ways have turned out to be smarter'n I thought. ;)

"Eat right. Stay fit. Die anyway" (he heh)

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/62935/title/Diabetes_drug_might_fight_cancer

Fair use for discussion education purposes:

Diabetes drug might fight cancer

In use for years, metformin has few side effects
By Nathan Seppa
Web edition : Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

An ancient herbal remedy that constitutes the active ingredient in a modern diabetes drug (Metformin) may soon play a new role in combating cancer, two studies show. The findings, published in the September Cancer Prevention Research, support earlier population studies suggesting that diabetes patients receiving the drug, called metformin, are less prone to develop cancer.

Metformin helps to stabilize blood sugar by decreasing the liver’s glucose output and increasing the sugar’s use by muscle tissue. Scott Lippman, an oncologist at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, estimates that more than 40 million metformin prescriptions have been filled in the United States. “It’s been around for a while,” he says.

In one of the new studies, Atsushi Nakajima of Yokohama City University School of Medicine in Japan and colleagues measured how metformin affected the development of tiny lesions in the colon. These lesions, called aberrant crypt foci, are precursors of polyps, which themselves can be the forerunners of colon cancer. Using colonoscopy data, the scientists identified 26 patients who had had polyps removed during a colonoscopy. The scientists randomly assigned some to get metformin and others to get a placebo.

After a month, the nine patients getting metformin who returned for a follow-up colonoscopy had substantially fewer lesions in the bowel than they had when they started on the drug, whereas 14 patients receiving a placebo had no change.

In the other study, a U.S. team induced lung cancer in mice with injections of a tobacco-based carcinogen. One week after the last shot, some mice were given either a low or a medium dose of metformin in their drinking water for 13 weeks. The tumor burden in these mice declined by 39 percent and 53 percent over that time, depending on the dose they received.

When the researchers delivered an even higher dose of metformin, this time by injection, the tumor burden shrank by 72 percent, says study coauthor Phillip Dennis of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md.

Metformin is a drug in the biguanide class. The drug is derived from the French lilac plant (Galega officinalis), also known as goat’s rue or Italian fitch. In medieval Europe the plant was used to treat frequent urination, says Michael Pollak, an oncologist at McGill University in Montreal. Modern-era scientists took an interest in the biguanides in the 1920s, and found they could use the compounds to lower blood sugar in rabbits.

Metformin was derived from the plant in the 1950s in France and was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1994 as Glucophage (literally “glucose eater”). The drug has since become generically available under the name metformin.

A history of use with few side effects may help metformin as it faces regulatory hurdles to become a cancer fighter, Lippman says. “A lot is known about the safety of this,” he says. “From a research perspective, this is extremely exciting. The next step will be to take it to a clinical trial.”

Less clear is the mechanism by which metformin seems to inhibit cancer, and which cancers would be most susceptible if it succeeds. Earlier, Pollak’s team had shown that metformin could inhibit growth of breast cancer cells in a lab dish by awakening an enzyme called AMPK. The group further found that revved-up AMPK inhibits the activity of mTOR — a protein involved in cell growth and proliferation. That could explain part of metformin’s apparent anticancer effect, Pollak says. But, he adds, “We are not yet in a position where we understand perfectly how it works.”

The cancer connection didn’t come out of the blue. In recent years, several population studies have noted that type 2 diabetes patients on metformin seem less likely than others to develop cancer.

Fred

Shairia
10th September 2010, 13:07
Nice to hear that a prescription medication can have some positive side effects. I've been on this drug for 12 years so I'm hoping the studies are accurate!

Fredkc
10th September 2010, 13:12
Hi Sharia...

10 years for me. ;)

Fred

Shairia
10th September 2010, 14:57
I think it's time we found a natural product that produces the same results Fred, I fear the old system isn't going to be working the same way in the very near future.

conk
13th September 2010, 20:16
100% raw food diet will kick the azz of diabetes in many cases.

Shairia
13th September 2010, 23:40
It depends on the type of diabetes. I know I have success in controlling it by diet but once I stop the oral medications bang it's back. I did try a raw food diet for 6 months but had problems due to a genetic disorder.

bennycog
16th September 2010, 13:57
Nice to hear that a prescription medication can have some positive side effects. I've been on this drug for 12 years so I'm hoping the studies are accurate!


Hi Sharia...

10 years for me. ;)



Fred

Almost 1 month for me, and hopefully looking like i do not need to take insulan for the rest of my life.. still have to wait for the results to come back for what type i am.
I have mms and will be trying it again when i have some decent amount of time at home. just have to chat with the fellow bill has set me up to chat with.. still trying to get hold of him.
it was a huge shock the docters could not understand how i was even walking around and talking.. my levels were at 33..
i really need this mms to work.. because my body is not on par with the vibrations we need to be at right now..
bennycog

Caren
16th September 2010, 14:27
Hi all,
About five years ago my young niece was diagnosed with Type one Diabetes. She was twenty three years old and had just returned home after teaching a year in Japan. Her blood sugar was also in the thirties and she was seriously ill by the time my sister took her to Emergency. The Doctor told my sister and brother in law that she probably would not have awoke in the morning. I remember seeing her earlier that day at a family picnic and I was honestly shocked. She had lost a lot of weight and was looking exhausted and 'yellow'. I am not sure which type of insulin she is taking but she is doing well with her diabetes and is saving money for an 'insulin pump'. Unfortunately, two years ago August past - she was diagnosed with a cancerous tumor in her small intestine. This was devastating for our family at the time but the surgeon was able to remove the entire tumor and she has a good prognosis. Hopefully everything will continue to be fine. Through it all she has always had an amazing 'strength' and the most positive attitude. We are all very proud of her.

Fredkc
16th September 2010, 15:11
Shairia;
I know I have success in controlling it by diet but once I stop the oral medications bang it's back.

Similar experience here. If find that diet can get me, perhaps 80% of the way towards licking it. Metaformin does the rest.
Understanding the struggle helps a lot, if you're willing to make the changes.

Type II is basically an "entropic state". One of the side effects of type 2 is that it tends to lower your body's metabolism.
Naturally this leads to less activity, and a further drain on the pancreas, due to the excess sugars in the blood stream.
The more strain on the pancreas, the more sugars remain unused in the blood stream, the more your metabolism slows.
Round and round.

Key here is exercise and watchfulness. You can approach the problem in a couple of ways:
1. Chemically. Here I include both meds and diet. They are the thing that will get you 90% of the way, in my experience.
2. Holistically. This is the "total assault" that can go a long way to getting you off the wheel. This inlcudes everything in #1 plus exercise! Do what I didn't ;)

Find something, anything you can take on as a daily activity which will drop and maintain you at a much lower weight. Make it a religious event for your body. What you are trying to achieve here is a "new metabolic rate" as your body's norm. You cannot do that with pills, diet, or even the combination. Your metabolism is the "3rd leg". this is why whenever you stop either one, the condition returns.

What I have learned from my own experience:
When I was diagnosed, I was spilling about 350. (Not good, although at the time my doctor told me 'not that bad', as he had people come in all the time that were spilling as much as 850)

So I began the pill/diet regimen, and soon had regular blood tests in the 140 range. Naturally I experience a huge change in how I felt (20 years younger, in fact). I got to where I could easily maintain a blood/sugar level in the mid-120's. yay!

Too much 'yay' in fact. I fell into the most common trap. I began "easing up on the diet", or skipping pills. Sure enough! I was back to testing @ 180-220. A little research will tell you that the current "magic number" is around 140. Whenever your blood sugar level is above that, it means there is enough "loose sugar" in the blood stream to cause the damaging side effects Diabetes is known for.

If you don't know, it's this:
the excess sugar travels around in your bloodstream as microscopic crystals. They find their way into small capillaries and either lodge there, or literally "slice at them". this is what causes the necropathy, loss of hearing and sight, heart damage, etc. No one needs this, any more than they want to be "slightly pregnant".

This takes you back to exercise! It is the third leg that will get you off the wheel, through weight loss. It is also the way to build a robust circulatory system. Magically it is also the best way to both increase metabolism, and lower blood pressure. See how this all works together ?

Good luck!

PS: I am not your spouse, parent, or doctor! I am just telling you what I've learned about this. Do what's best. ;)

Fred

fifi
17th September 2010, 06:25
Thank you very much for your advice, Fred. They are totally true in my case.

bennycog
17th September 2010, 06:45
fredkc
"Too much 'yay' in fact. I fell into the most common trap. I began "easing up on the diet", or skipping pills. Sure enough! I was back to testing @ 180-220. A little research will tell you that the current "magic number" is around 140. Whenever your blood sugar level is above that, it means there is enough "loose sugar" in the blood stream to cause the damaging side effects Diabetes is known for."

i do not uunderstand these numbers. the machine i have the best to be between is 4 and 7

Fredkc
17th September 2010, 08:37
Hi benny;

"i do not understand these numbers. the machine i have the best to be between is 4 and 7 "

Ok, not sure what your numbers mean either. Quite possibly a way of 'simplifying' things for people. The numbers I used are in the terminology my doctor uses, and how my testing machine is calibrated.

when I say '140' I am referring to a blood/sugar level of 140 Mg/Dl. That is Milligrams per Deca-liter.

Here is one reference (http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/14045621.php), from a quick Google.

Maybe your machine has some equivalency chart or instructions for the system they use?

Fred

Caren
17th September 2010, 16:49
Hi there benny and Fred, there is actually a simple explanation re: the different numbers (or blood sugar readings). They are two different systems: the American vs: the Canadian, better known as the Systeme International d'unities (Sl units) for short. The latter system is used by most countries in the world (blood laboratories) and is deemed to be a little more precise. The Americans use a different version of the metric system (re: blood sugar, lipids..etc..) than other countries do. A few years back when I was being trained as a surgical nurse, Canada had just converted to the newer system. I hope this is of some help and have a
'love' filled Friday. :)