New research published in Evolution, Medicine and Public Health offers an intriguing theory about how metabolic diseases increase the risk of cancer.
![Could an Overload of Energy Leads to Cancer? Could an Overload of Energy Leads to Cancer?](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/why-is-obesity-risk-for-breast-cancer.jpg)
‘Lifestyle modifications like switching over to a healthier diet and regular exercises will help put off the threat of cancer in high-risk groups.’
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Healthy tissue has a built-in limiter that keeps cell proliferation in check. But an energy overload -- common in diabetes, obesity, and inflammation -- can overwhelm those guardrails. "One question is, how abundant are the resources cells need for proliferation? If they are more abundant in some tissues, that might be what evolves into cancer," Pepper says. He and his colleagues, Daniel Wu of Stanford University and C. Athena Aktipis of Arizona State University, building on previous work by French researchers and others that suggested an oversupply of energy may be one of those proliferation resources, used a computer model of cell evolution to simulate what happens when a tissue is flooded with energy. They found that such an overload did indeed cause a cell production boom. The study hints at a new explanation for how cancer evolves, particularly in the obese and other high-risk populations. ![twitter](https://images.medindia.net/icons/news/social/twitter.png)
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It may also help explain the inverse: why following a healthy diet and exercising regularly can reduce that risk. "One of the pieces that’s been missing is, when these lifestyle changes are made it has to be through some kind of physiological mechanism," Pepper says.
While empirical studies are needed to confirm the findings, the study lays the groundwork for what could be an important advance in cancer prevention research -- an area that deserves increased attention, he adds.
Pepper credits conversations with other Santa Fe Institute faculty -- Michael Hochberg, Chris Kempes, Jim Brown, and Geoffrey West -- for inspiring him to consider the connection between energy supply and cancer cell proliferation.
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