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AACR 2012: Metformin appeared to slow prostate cancer growth

1 Apr 2012
AACR 2012: Metformin appeared to slow prostate cancer growth

The use of metformin in men with prostate cancer before prostatectomy helped to reduce certain metabolic parameters and slow the growth rate of the cancer, according to the results of a phase II study.

 

Anthony M. Joshua, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., staff medical oncologist at the Princess Margaret Hospital, University Health Network in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, presented the data at the AACR Annual Meeting 2012.

 

Metformin is the most commonly prescribed medication for diabetes.

 

Prior laboratory research has suggested that metformin may also help to improve prognosis in patients with prostate cancer by slowing the growth of the cancerous cells.

 

To follow up on the laboratory clues, Joshua and colleagues evaluated 22 men with confirmed prostate cancer who had been assigned up to 500 mg of metformin three times a day prior to undergoing prostatectomy.

 

“This gave us the ability to compare what the prostate cancer looked like when it was first diagnosed to what it looked like when the prostate cancer was removed from the body,” said Joshua. “We were able to directly measure the effect of metformin on the prostate cancer.”

 

Patients were assigned metformin for a median duration of 41 days. During that time, none of the men reported grade 3 adverse events, and all of them underwent prostatectomy with no adverse effect related to use of metformin.

 

The researchers found that metformin significantly reduced fasting glucose, insulin growth factor-1, body mass index and waist-to-hip ratio.

 

In addition, “although these are preliminary results, metformin appeared to reduce the growth rate of prostate cancer in a proportion of men,” Joshua said. “Also, it appeared to reduce one of the main growth pathways that may have contributed to the overall growth of the tumour.”

 

These results may have implications for men with prostate cancer who also have diabetes or early undiagnosed diabetes and for men with prostate cancer whose tumours have characteristics that make them sensitive to metformin, according to Joshua.

 

“This research builds on the hypothesis that metformin has a role in prostate cancer,” he said.

 

“Exactly what that role will be will depend on the results of the analysis currently being completed by our study team and others worldwide.”

 

Joshua is particularly interested in better defining the precise mechanism of action and the subpopulation of patients with prostate cancer for whom metformin has the potential to improve outcomes.

 

This study was funded by The Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation, the Jewish General Hospital Foundation (Montreal) and the Terry Fox Foundation.

 

Source: AACR