I subscribe to the metabolic theory of cancer. Given all my talk about fasting, OxPhos and keto on this blog, this is not a secret, but let me officially say it here.
The theory was originated by nobel-prize-winner Otto Warburg in the 1930s and was recently restored to prominence by Dr. Thomas Seyfried of Boston College and a handful of his peers.
The Metabolic Theory
Warburg discovered that cancer cells, unlike healthy cells, rely on glucose fermentation for energy even when more efficient energy sources are available. This is a universally accepted hallmark of cancer and the reason why PET scans work. Nevertheless, this route of research was abandoned when Watson and Crick unlocked the secrets of DNA. Since then, research has been dedicated almost exclusively to understanding the nuclear genetics of cancer. In 2015 the US and partners completed the Cancer Genome Atlas and successfully completed the sequencing of 10,000 tumors. The project turned up over 10 million genetic mutations in the tumors but no answers regarding the mystery of cancer.
There is no doubt that the nuclear genetic component of cancer is important – targeting mutations is what led to crizotinib and lorlatinib, targeted therapies that have saved my life. However, there are unknown millions of potential mutations. Each person – nay, each tumor – contains hundreds of differently mutated cells and those cancer cells continue to mutate. This is why I developed resistance to crizotinib in 4 months and will eventually develop resistance to lorlatinib.
We can continue to invest in the whack-a-mole game of identifying oncogenes and developing targeted therapies but this will never result in broadly available cancer treatment. For example, my ROS1+ mutation is only found in about 1% of adenocarcinoma non-small cell lung cancers. My treatment is only effective in about 50% of people who take it, costs $20,000 a month and is effective for a year on average. This is not an efficient or sustainable way to treat cancer and will never result in a “cure.” Instead this line of investment results in dizzying complexity even as it drives huge profits.
In just the past 5 years, however, there’s been a change in the cancer treatment paradigm as support and evidence for the metabolic theory grows. There is striking evidence that these countless genetic mutations are all caused by damage to cellular metabolism. Whether that damage is rooted in viral (e.g., HPV), bacterial (e.g., H pylori), or environmental causes (e.g., chemicals, smoking, high sugar diets) they can all be tied to the damage caused to mitochondrial respiration.
Paradigm Shift
Long before my diagnosis I read the 2016 New York Times Magazine piece on Metformin, the common diabetes drug used to lower blood sugar, being used for cancer treatment and prevention. Little did I know at the time that the researcher quoted in the article, Dr. Thomas Seyfried, had already developed the diet I’d use to help prolong my life years later.
Seyfried’s book, Cancer as a Metabolic Disease, is used as a textbook in some medical schools and unfortunately has a textbook price tag. Much of its content is summarized for the layman and wrapped in an engaging narrative in Tripping Over the Truth by Travis Christofferson. It’s an excellent read that I, like Seyfried, highly recommend.
As research continues to demonstrate the metabolic basis of cancer, I believe that not only will prevention become easier, there just may be better treatment options for folks like me if I can hang around long enough.
Press-Pulse
The mitochondrial dysfunction of cancer cells results in their dependency on both glucose and glutamine to generate energy. Most of the glucose in our bodies comes from the carbohydrates we eat although it is possible for the liver to generate glucose from protein. Glutamine is a non-essential amino acid which means it’s made by the body and doesn’t have to come from diet. It’s also the most abundant amino acid in the body.
Unlike cancer cells, healthy cells have more options for getting their energy including “ketone bodies” or “ketones,” which we generate when there’s no readily available glucose. Interestingly enough, ketones also protect cells from the negative effects of oxidation. This is why fasting before oxidative therapies like chemo and radiation will reduce or prevent side effects – your body has lots of ketones floating around protecting healthy cells.
In 2017 Seyfried and others published a paper on “Press-pulse: a novel therapeutic strategy for the metabolic management of cancer.”
The Press-Pulse strategy involves applying constant metabolic stress and with periodic “pulses” of acute stress.
Press Therapies
- Calorie-restricted ketogenic diet. There have been multiple studies comparing different versions of the ketogenic diet with different types of calorie restriction alone and in combination. Keto with calorie restriction is the best way to keep the glucose-ketone index in check.
- Ketone supplementation. High ketones even more than low blood sugar are associated with positive outcomes as ketones both stress cancer cells while protecting normal cells.
- Patient stress management. Stress is known not only to raise blood sugar but increase inflammation creating just the kind of environment cancer loves. Recommended stress reduction techniques include exercise (also directs blood glucose from cancer to muscles) and meditation.
Pulse Therapies
- Glucose Inhibition. I assume in this case fasting combined with glucose-lowering drugs like Metformin.
- Glutamine Inhibition. Glutamine is also required for healthy cells to operate so it makes sense that glutamine suppression would be part of the pulse. With mice, researchers used DON (6-Diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine), a glutamine antagonist that is pretty toxic to humans.
- Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy. Oxygen administered under pressure forces oxygen into otherwise hypoxic tissues. Cancer hates oxygen and is especially susceptible to oxidative therapies (like chemo, radiation, and HBOT).
This approach to treatment makes tremendous sense to me. I’ve already been doing the cancer “press” – I need to pulse. The biggest open question from my perspective is that of the best cadence or schedule for pulses: weekly, monthly, etc…
No Diet is a Cure for Cancer
No diet can cure cancer. This is a fact.
I can control the glucose coming into my body, nudge down those blood sugar points a bit with supplements and meditation, and take as many supplemental ketones as I can afford but this will only slow progression. In order to really prolong my life I need “pulses” that work. I need to find ways to block cancer’s non-glucose metabolic pathways and subject it to additional oxidative stress.
Jane McLelland somehow figured this all out in the 1990s without Seyfried’s research or the internet. Her book published in 2018, How to Starve Cancer, has an awful title and priceless information. In it, she incorporates the latest metabolic research including press-pulse with the approach she took to treating her stage 4 cancer 20 years ago. Her research has been guiding me in identifying all potential metabolic pathways and potential ways to block them. Not all pathways will apply to all cancer but all cancers will adapt over time to what’s thrown at them. For my cancer, I have to assume that when I block one path, it will reroute to another. I need to block all the pathways it can use.
Glucose Pathways
A ketogenic diet will reduce available glucose but the liver can still make glucose from protein. A reduced -calorie ketogenic diet will reduce available glucose even more.
- Glucose Transporter 1 blocked by lipophilic statins, quercetin
- Insulin blocked by keto diet, metformin, berberine, chromium picolinate
- Pentose Phosphate Pathway blocked by DHEA
- OxPhos blocked by berberine, doxycycline, metformin, niclosamide (NICL)
- Aerobic Gylcolysis blocked by 2DG, Dichloroacetate (DCA)
Glutamine/ Amino Acid Pathways
While humans can operate just fine – in many ways better – with ketones in place of glucose, they require glutamine for survival. It’s still a good idea to avoid dietary sources of excess glutamine like meat, dairy, or beans.
- IGF-1 blocked by metformin, tamoxifen
- Glutamine OxPhos blocked by oxaloacetate, berberine, doxycycline, metformin, niclosamide
- mTOR blocked by fasting, metformin, berberine
- Macropinocytosis (Autophagy) blocked by chloroquine
- Nucleoside Salvage (Autophagy) blocked by dipyridamole
- Glutaminolysis blocked by epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), Ursolic Acid, curcumin, resveratrol, asparaginase (also avoid asparagus), bis-2 ethyl sulphide
Fatty Acid Pathways
I don’t know much about cancers using fatty acids for energy. Cancer does require fatty acids for building cell membranes and as signalling molecules when dividing and there’s some evidence that limiting FA availability can control proliferation.
- Acetate blocked by berberine via SREBP-1
- Sterol Regulating End Binding Protein-1 blocked by berberine
- Sterol Regulating End Binding Protein-2 blocked by mevalonate
- ATP Citrate Lyase
- Fatty Acid Synthesis blocked by metformin + aspirin, possibly
- Fatty Acid Oxidation blocked by doxycycline, mildronate
- Mevalonate Pathway blocked by lipophilic statins
Blocking Cancer’s Metabolic Pathways
There are a lot of common drugs above that can block multiple pathways: Metformin, statins, berberine. Some I can easily get. Berberine is a common supplement; I just turned down statins from my doctor last week. Some are harder. I’d need diabetes or a very open-minded oncologist to get a prescription for metformin. Similar for chloroquine or doxycycline, a common antimalarial and antibiotic, respectively.
There’s hope, however!
Just this weekend I found Care Oncology Clinic. They’re based in the UK with offices in the US and New Zealand and provide exactly this type of medication for complementary treatment. I reached out this weekend and am hoping to hear back soon.
Given the acceleration of research and interest since the metabolic theory finally became more widely accepted, I’m sure that the investment dollars will follow soon. In the meantime, I’m more confident than ever that I’ll be able to manage my condition long enough for this next treatment paradigm to take hold.
Dr. Seyfried’s Presentation of Press-Pulse Therapy
Notes:
Results to date have been based on mouse models and one human case study. Seyfried’s mouse model, VM-M3, is recognized as the most similar to human cancer and increasingly loaned to other labs. The human case study was conducted in Turkey which some may poo-poo but it’s unbelievably difficult/ expensive to coordinate a human trial in the US. This follows US human trials showing the ketogenic diet as a complementary treatment cano extend life in glioblastoma patients – in addition to countless anecdotal reports. The latter don’t count as “evidence” because they weren’t coordinated by an appropriate authority.
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