医学
减肥
2型糖尿病
糖尿病
孟德尔随机化
癌症
胰腺癌
内科学
肿瘤科
生物信息学
内分泌学
肥胖
生物
生物化学
遗传变异
基因型
基因
作者
Caroline J. Bull,Emma Hazelwood,Danny Legge,Laura J. Corbin,Tom G. Richardson,Matthew A. Lee,James Yarmolinsky,Karl Smith-Byrne,David A. Hughes,Mattias Johansson,Ulrike Peters,Sonja I. Berndt,Hermann Brenner,Andrea N. Burnett‐Hartman,Iona Cheng,Sun‐Seog Kweon,Loı̈c Le Marchand,Li Li,Polly A. Newcomb,Rachel Pearlman,Alex McConnachie,Paul Welsh,Roy Taylor,Michael E. J. Lean,Naveed Sattar,Neil Murphy,Marc J. Gunter,Nicholas J. Timpson,Emma E. Vincent
出处
期刊:EBioMedicine
[Elsevier]
日期:2024-02-01
卷期号:100: 104977-104977
被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.104977
摘要
BackgroundType 2 diabetes is associated with higher risk of several cancer types. However, the biological intermediates driving this relationship are not fully understood. As novel interventions for treating and managing type 2 diabetes become increasingly available, whether they also disrupt the pathways leading to increased cancer risk is currently unknown. We investigated the effect of a type 2 diabetes intervention, in the form of intentional weight loss, on circulating proteins associated with cancer risk to gain insight into potential mechanisms linking type 2 diabetes and adiposity with cancer development.MethodsFasting serum samples from participants with diabetes enrolled in the Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial (DiRECT) receiving the Counterweight-Plus weight-loss programme (intervention, N = 117, mean weight-loss 10 kg, 46% diabetes remission) or best-practice care by guidelines (control, N = 143, mean weight-loss 1 kg, 4% diabetes remission) were subject to proteomic analysis using the Olink Oncology-II platform (48% of participants were female; 52% male). To identify proteins which may be altered by the weight-loss intervention, the difference in protein levels between groups at baseline and 1 year was examined using linear regression. Mendelian randomization (MR) was performed to extend these results to evaluate cancer risk and elucidate possible biological mechanisms linking type 2 diabetes and cancer development. MR analyses were conducted using independent datasets, including large cancer meta-analyses, UK Biobank, and FinnGen, to estimate potential causal relationships between proteins modified during intentional weight loss and the risk of colorectal, breast, endometrial, gallbladder, liver, and pancreatic cancers.FindingsNine proteins were modified by the intervention: glycoprotein Nmb; furin; Wnt inhibitory factor 1; toll-like receptor 3; pancreatic prohormone; erb-b2 receptor tyrosine kinase 2; hepatocyte growth factor; endothelial cell specific molecule 1 and Ret proto-oncogene (Holm corrected P-value <0.05). Mendelian randomization analyses indicated a causal relationship between predicted circulating furin and glycoprotein Nmb on breast cancer risk (odds ratio (OR) = 0.81, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.67–0.99, P-value = 0.03; and OR = 0.88, 95% CI = 0.78–0.99, P-value = 0.04 respectively), though these results were not supported in sensitivity analyses examining violations of MR assumptions.InterpretationIntentional weight loss among individuals with recently diagnosed diabetes may modify levels of cancer-related proteins in serum. Further evaluation of the proteins identified in this analysis could reveal molecular pathways that mediate the effect of adiposity and type 2 diabetes on cancer risk.FundingThe main sources of funding for this work were Diabetes UK, Cancer Research UK, World Cancer Research Fund, and Wellcome.