Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5U01CA272452-03 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Tobias, Deirdre |
Organization: |
Brigham And Women'S Hospital |
Project Title: |
Decoding Mechanisms Underlying Metabolic Dysregulation in Obesity and Digestive Cancer Risk |
Fiscal Year: |
2024 |
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Obesity is associated with increased risk of at least 13 cancers. Of all cancers attributable to excess adiposity,
colorectum and liver account for 55% of cancer among men and 48% among women, excluding reproductive
cancers. Although most epidemiologic studies of obesity as a cancer risk factor evaluated body mass index
(BMI), accumulating evidence for colorectal and liver cancers implicates viscerally located adiposity (and its
closely related glycemic metabolic dysregulation) as the likely direct causal component. How visceral adiposity
mechanistically predisposes its proximal organs to cancer is largely unknown. Inflammation undoubtedly plays
a role in development and progression of malignancies, including colorectal and liver cancers; however, the
large body of evidence for general inflammation processes and systemic markers like C-reactive protein (CRP)
in relation to digestive cancers are underwhelming, possibly because most are non-specific to high-risk
metabolically unhealthy obesity per se. Thus, distilling the inflammatory pathways and markers to identify those
most reflective of the metabolically unhealthy obese state has immense potential to uncover key mechanisms
and inform powerful broad-spectrum strategies for prevention. Techniques to obtain precise measures to
characterize metabolically unhealthy obesity are often prohibitively costly and logistically infeasible in the
context of large population-based studies. Therefore, we propose an innovative approach to address these
gaps by (i) deriving novel proteomic-based inflammation signatures of metabolically unhealthy obesity
(“Inflammotypes”) in cohorts with visceral adipose tissue quantified via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry
(DXA) and traits of glycemic metabolic function; then (ii) prospectively investigating these novel Inflammotypes
in longitudinal cohorts with stored blood samples in relation to incident colorectal and liver cancer risk. We will
characterize Inflammotypes via state-of-the-art Olink proteomic panel (384 inflammation-related proteins) to
describe metabolically unhealthy obesity (i.e., higher visceral adiposity, with homeostatic model assessment
for insulin resistance [HOMA-IR], hemoglobin A1c [HbA1c], or lipoprotein insulin resistance score [LPIR]).
Machine learning analyses to identify the Inflammotypes will be replicated in an external cohort. We will then
investigate the relationship between proteomic Inflammotypes with long-term risk of incident colorectal (1000
cases/1000 controls) and liver cancer (500 cases/500 controls), combining longitudinal cohorts with stored
baseline bloods and long-term follow-up (median ranges 6.1-16.7 years). Based on compelling preliminary
data, we hypothesize the combination of greater visceral adipose tissue and glycemic metabolic dysregulation
are associated with abnormal profiles of circulating proteins, and that these novel Inflammotypes are
independently predictive of long-term colorectal and liver cancer risks. These aims are closely aligned with the
goals of the Metabolic Dysregulation and Cancer Risk Program, including enhancing identification of high-risk
individuals, risk prediction, and elucidation of potential preventive and therapeutic targets.
Publications
Diabetes risk reduction diet and risk of liver cancer and chronic liver disease mortality: A prospective cohort study.
Authors: Chen Y.
, Zhao L.
, Jung S.Y.
, Pichardo M.S.
, Lopez-Pentecost M.
, Rohan T.E.
, Saquib N.
, Sun Y.
, Tabung F.K.
, Zheng T.
, et al.
.
Source: Journal Of Internal Medicine, 2024-09-06 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2024-09-06 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 39239793
Related Citations
Pre-diagnostic plasma inflammatory proteins and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in three population-based cohort studies from the United States and the United Kingdom.
Authors: Zhao L.
, Zhang X.
, Birmann B.M.
, Danford C.J.
, Lai M.
, Simon T.G.
, Chan A.T.
, Giovannucci E.L.
, Ngo L.
, Libermann T.A.
, et al.
.
Source: International Journal Of Cancer, 2024-06-11 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2024-06-11 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 38861327
Related Citations
Pre-diagnostic plasma proteomics profile for hepatocellular carcinoma.
Authors: Zhang X.
, Zhao L.
, Ngo L.H.
, Dillon S.T.
, Gu X.
, Lai M.
, Simon T.G.
, Chan A.T.
, Giovannucci E.L.
, Libermann T.A.
, et al.
.
Source: Journal Of The National Cancer Institute, 2024-05-01 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2024-05-01 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 38688524
Related Citations
Association of dietary insulinemic and inflammatory potential with risk of liver cancer and chronic liver disease mortality in postmenopausal women: a prospective cohort study.
Authors: Zhang X.
, Zhao L.
, Christopher C.N.
, Tabung F.K.
, Bao W.
, Garcia D.O.
, Shadyab A.H.
, Saquib N.
, Neuhouser M.L.
, Tinker L.F.
, et al.
.
Source: The American Journal Of Clinical Nutrition, 2023 Sep; 118(3), p. 530-537.
EPub date: 2023-07-17 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 37460062
Related Citations
Higher ultra-processed food intake was positively associated with odds of NAFLD in both US adolescents and adults: A national survey.
Authors: Zhao L.
, Zhang X.
, Martinez Steele E.
, Lo C.H.
, Zhang F.F.
, Zhang X.
.
Source: Hepatology Communications, 2023-09-01 00:00:00.0; 7(9), .
EPub date: 2023-08-31 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 37655983
Related Citations
Sugar-Sweetened and Artificially Sweetened Beverages and Risk of Liver Cancer and Chronic Liver Disease Mortality.
Authors: Zhao L.
, Zhang X.
, Coday M.
, Garcia D.O.
, Li X.
, Mossavar-Rahmani Y.
, Naughton M.J.
, Lopez-Pentecost M.
, Saquib N.
, Shadyab A.H.
, et al.
.
Source: Jama, 2023-08-08 00:00:00.0; 330(6), p. 537-546.
PMID: 37552302
Related Citations