Review Article Volume 8 Issue 3
1Department of Nutrition, Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences, Iran
2Department of Nutrition, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
Correspondence: Mohammadreza Vafa, Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Received: June 06, 2018 | Published: June 26, 2018
Citation: Abiri B, Vafa M. Dietary omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and treatment of cancer. Adv Obes Weight Manag Control. 2018;8(3):198-201. DOI: 10.15406/aowmc.2018.08.00243
The results of animal studies have shown that the consumption of omega-3 fatty acids can reduce the inflammatory biomarkers, enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy and decrease the side effects of the chemotherapy or of the cancer. Studies in human populations have associated high intake of fish or fish oil to decreased risk of some cancers. In this review we discuss the reasons for using omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids as adjuvant to ameliorate the efficacy of anticancer treatment.
Keywords: omega-3, cancer treatment, diet
Global cancer incidence and mortality rates are high and elevating. Worldwide, it is estimated that the annual number of cancer diagnoses will promote to 22 million by 2032.1 In spite of progress made in cancer chemotherapy, advanced solid tumors consisting of advanced carcinomas, sarcomas, melanoma, and glioblastoms, yet show wide problems in their treatment and traditional therapeutic agents alone have not produced satisfactory long-term clinical outcomes.2,3 Also, in those cases which the tumor has seemingly been eliminated fully, micro-metastases of inactive tumor cells often result to relapse and to therapeutic failing. Hence, considering the problems of scape and survival to cancer progress, most oncologists have concluded that no unique therapy is enough to treatment of cancer.4,5
Dietary fish oil has been demonstrated to have useful impacts on some chronic degenerative disease like cancer.6 The useful impacts of fish oil appear to be resulted from its high content of the omega-3 fatty acids such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA).6 Some investigations have shown the ability of EPA and DHA to affect cancer proliferation,7 apoptosis,7 and differentiation,7 also to inhibit angiogenesis,8 tumor cell invasion,9 and metastasis.10 Such data propose that EPA and DHA can both make anti-tumor activity potentially representing an effectual adjuvant in cancer chemotherapy and improve some of the secondary difficulties related to cancer, such as cachexia.10,11 Evidence exists on the effectiveness of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid DHA as anti-cancer adjuvant, with specific attention to its ability both to increase the uptake of anti-cancer drugs, particularly in cells otherwise resistant to these drugs, and to enhance the pro-oxidant and pro-apoptotic effectiveness of some chemotherapeutic factors.11 This paper investigates the potential consumption of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids EPA and DHA as adjuvant to ameliorate the effectiveness of anticancer treatment.12
DHA as adjuvant to ameliorate tumor cell cytotoxicity resulted from oxidative stress
Some studies demonstrate that high levels of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) creation are indispensable for cellular proliferation and tumorigenesis. ROS can influence on target gene expression via phosphorylation, activation and oxidation of transcription factors such as APEX1, NF-kB, P53, and HIF-1α.13–15 Furthermore, ROS can oxidize and suppress signaling molecules like P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphatase, leading to increased proliferation and survival of cancer cells.16 Although different anti-cancer drugs initially lead to ROS creation, in most cancer cells the long-term treatment with these drugs decreases the levels of ROS, leading to drug-resistance.17,18 Therefore, drug-combination therapies might be a good plan to enhance the effectiveness of common anti-cancer treatments by acting as follows: 1) keeping higher ROS levels in cancer cells, thereby preventing drug resistance; 2) decreasing cancer endogenous antioxidant defense; 3) promoting drug uptake and hence apoptosis.11
One study indicated DHA dose-dependently promoted reactive species generation and thus membrane lipid peroxidation, in HT-29 and Caco-2 colon carcinoma cells.19 In addition, some studies indicate that this impact was increased when DHA was administered in combined with some chemotherapeutic factors. It has been demonstrated that in vitro administration of DHA ameliorated adryamicin uptake, cytotoxicity towards L1210 murine leukemia cells and enhanced tumor cell lipid peroxidation and oxidative injury.20 Some observations propose that DHA may be able to enhancing the absorption of anticancer drugs in both resistant and sensible cells and that the incorporated DHA-mediated lipid peroxidation may result to greater cytotoxic impact in compared with chemotherapy alone. But, the enhanced drug absorption by DHA was not observed in all tumor cell models. Indeed, though it has been indicated that DHA is able to enhance doxorubicin uptake in doxorubicin resistant mouse leukemia cells21 and in MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7dox human breast carcinoma cell lines, the same effect has not been demonstrated in parental MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells.22 The inconclusive results might be resulted from the fact that various cell lines might have various cellular features, like membrane formation and configuration. However, even if DHA does not perform in some cells as a drug uptake enhancer, it can make cells more susceptible to oxidative injury made by exogenous factors. Hence, in some cases, DHA can lead to exceed the maximum threshold of ROS tolerability in cancer cells.23
Some evidence proposes the proapoptotic effect of DHA, both alone and/or in combined with anti-cancer chemotherapies.11 The apoptotic impact of DHA seems to happen via both the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways.24 This effect is more emphasized by the fact that DHA appears to be a strong inducer of apoptosis only in cancer cells but not in normal cells. For example, it performs as a pro-apoptotic agent in colon cancer cells, while no significant pro-apoptotic impact was seen in the NCM460 normal human colon mucosal epithelial cell line.25 It has been indicated the pro-apoptotic effect of DHA is performed by various ways, consisting of the induction of lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress. Also, DHA can be quickly absorbed by mitochondrial membranes, changing their permeability and reducing the mitochondrial membrane potential.26,27 The impacts have been demonstrated in DHA-combined treatment with 5-fluorouracil, oxaliplatin and irinotecan in HT-29 human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells. The anti-cancer effect of DHA, observed in presence of low doses of chemotherapeutic agents, was performed first by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and then via caspase-9 activation.28–32
Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids as adjuvant to ameliorate the anti-metastatic effectiveness of anticancer therapies
Tumor metastasis is the main reason of mortality in most cancer patients and hence the most life-threatening aspect facet of various kinds of tumors. Some evidence suggests that the intake of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and especially DHA impede not only the initiation of many types of tumors but also their development, in that it prevents metastases of murine and human tumors in vivo.33–36 In fact, marine fatty acid (EPA and DHA) intake is related to decrease all case mortality in patients with breast cancer.37 Moreover, there is some evidence that DHA promotes the anti-metastatic impact of anticancer drugs or other chemical agents.10,38,39 In 1994, Rose et al. began certain investigations about the impacts of dietary fish oil omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, on the growth and metastases of MDA-MB-435 human breast cancer cells in female nude mice.40 Animals received three isocaloric diets containing 23% total fat but various ratio of corn oil (rich in linoleic acid) and menhaden oil (rich in DHA and EPA).34,40 The researchers found that, in opposite to mice fed diets rich in linoleic acid, mice receiving diets supplemented with DHA or EPA indicated an important inhibition of both primary tumor growth rate and lung metastasis incident and severity proposing a role for DHA and EPA in the suppression not only for tumor growth but also of metastasing of human breast cancer cells.40,41 These researchers evaluated tumor responses to DHA or EPA supplementation after surgical excision of the primary tumors. They reported DHA, but not EPA, significantly decreased lung involvement after the surgical excision.42 Thus, according to these results, the researchers proposed that omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and especially DHA may have an importance in nutritional therapy of breast cancer as part of both adjuvant and post-excision adjuvant anti-metastatic diet. In another study, by using purified DHA in a murine mammary metastatic tumor model,43 the researchers reported that DHA inhibited not only the growth but also metastasis of the MM48 murine mammary tumor transplanted in to C3H/He mice. In another investigation, using a mouse model of human breast cancer cell metastasis to bone, it was indicated that dietary fish oil EPA and DHA inhibited the genesis of osteolytic lesions in bone, proposing a useful impact of omega-3 fatty acids EPA and DHA on breast cancer cell metastasis to bone.44
The anti-metastatic feature of DHA was also evaluated by use of different animal models of colon cancer metastases. It has been indicated that dietary marine oil (EPA and DHA) prevented the growth and the pulmonary colonization of a transplantable colon tumor implanted in the colon of male Balblc mice.33 In another investigation, by use the same subcutaneous implanted highly metastatic colon carcinoma 26 model, it was reported that a DHA rich diet, when administered with tumor cells, notably inhibited lung metastasis. Furthermore, they showed that in vivo DHA-treated tumor cells kept their low potential for lung colony formation when moved to new hosts, suggesting that the impact of DHA was exerted directly on the metastatic capability of tumor cell.45,46 Gleissman et al.,36 demonstrated that DHA, given daily by gavage in atymic rats, retarded the development of established aggressive human neuroblastoma xenografts. The molecular mechanisms by which DHA may influence the metastatic capacity of tumors remain unknown. However, a number of molecular mechanisms have been suggested. Incorporation of DHA in the tumor cell membrane leads to alter in its lipid constitution, which might create plasma membrane notably less fluid and less deformable.47 Hence, it has been suggested that the anti-metastatic effect of DHA may be associated with noticeable alterations in the fatty acid composition of tumor cell, which damage tumor cell membrane and reduce the capability to metastasize.40,45 Mandel et al. by use of the mouse model of human breast cancer cell metastasis to bone indicated that fish oil supplementation significantly suppressed mRNA and protein levels of the cell-surface CD44 adhesion molecule in the MDA-MB-231 tumors, hence recognizing a novel performance for DHA in tumor cells that is the targeting of the cell-intrinsic pro-metastatic CD44 molecule expression.44 Some other targets of DHA consisting of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2), NF-kB, MAPK, peroxisome proliferator activated receptor- đŸ (PPAR- đŸ), Akt, and B-cell lymphoma/Bcl-2 related X protein (BCL-2/BAX) play a major role in the inhibition of metastases and some reviews are available on their implication in DHA impact on tumor cell proliferation,48 angiogenesis,8 and immune system response,49 all crucial events in the metastatic course.
Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and tumor cell invasion
In a study about the impact of DHA on tumor cell invasion, Connolly and Rose, by using an in vitro invasion test, evaluated the impact of linoleic acid, EPA, and DHA on the invasion ability of the MDA-MB-435 human breast cancer cell line. They indicated that though all these fatty acids did not impact on the migration of tumor cells, DHA and EPA, but not linoleic acid, significantly suppressed the invasion of tumor cells.29 Other researchers evaluated the anti-invasion impact of combining DHA with other nutritional agent such as genistein.10 Genistein is an isoflavonoid isolated from soybean, has been demonstrated to exert anticancer effects. These researchers assayed the combination of DHA and genistein for the synergistic suppression of cell invasiveness, inhibition of PGE2 production and COX2 expression in cancer cells. In fact, their data indicated a synergistic impact of genistein and DHA in inhibiting cell invasiveness and endogenous production of PGE2.10 The anti-invasive effect of DHA was also evaluated by using other kinds of experimental tumor models. One study indicated that DHA significantly suppressed the invasion of caki-1 cell carcinoma cell line.30 In the 70W human melanoma cell line (brain metastatic melanoma in nude mice), the researchers indicated DHA reduced invasion and this impact was associated with the suppression of COX2 expression, that consequently downregulated PGE2 production.31 Another study reported that DHA prevented migration and invasion of the Bel-7402 human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line.32
In conclusion, it seems that combination therapy of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and antitumor drugs may enhance the cytotoxic effectiveness of drug treatment alone, because it should allow cancer cells to keep higher levels of ROS, decrease endogenous antioxidant tumor cell defenses, and enhance drug uptake. Since the population of cancer patients has had an increasing trend during the last century, finding a useful nutritional intervention to promote the response to treatment with fewer side effects can improve the quality of life in these patients.
This study did not receive any financial support.
The author declares there is no conflict of interest.
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