Fixed-dose combinations of pioglitazone and metformin for lung cancer prevention

Menée sur un modèle murin de carcinogenèse du poumon induite chimiquement, cette étude évalue l'effet chimiopréventif de doses de metformine et/ou de pioglitazone (deux antidiabétiques oraux) sur le développement d'adénomes pulmonaires

Cancer Prevention Research, sous presse, 2017, résumé

Résumé en anglais

Combination treatment with pioglitazone and metformin are utilized clinically in the treatment of type II diabetes. Treatment with this drug combination reduced the development of aerodigestive cancers in this patient population. Our goal is to expand this treatment into clinical lung cancer chemoprevention. We hypothesized that dietary delivery of metformin/pioglitazone would prevent lung adenoma formation in A/J mice in a B[a]P-induced carcinogenesis model while modulating chemoprevention and anti-inflammatory biomarkers in residual adenomas. We found metformin (500 & 850 mg/kg/day) and pioglitazone (15 mg/kg/day) produced statistically significant decreases in lung adenoma formation both as single agent treatments and in combination, compared to untreated controls, after 15 weeks. Treatment with metformin alone and in combination with pioglitazone resulted in statistically significant decreases in lung adenoma formation at both early and late stage interventions. Pioglitazone alone resulted in significant decreases in adenoma formation only at early treatment intervention. We conclude oral metformin is a viable chemopreventive treatment at doses ranging from 500 to 1000 mg/kg/day. Pioglitazone at 15 mg/kg/day is a viable chemopreventive agent at early stage interventions. Combination metformin and pioglitazone performed equal to metformin alone and better than pioglitazone at 15 mg/kg/day. Since the drugs are already FDA approved, rapid movement to human clinical studies is possible.