Many difficult-to-treat solid cancer tumours and metastases have high-glucose uptake, usually under hypoxic conditions. Hypoxic tumours suppress the immune system and are insensitive to traditional chemoradiotherapies. The only therapy usually available is surgical resection. However, with widespread metastases, surgery often becomes unviable. Surgery in itself can also result in metastasis. The need for investigating adjuvant treatments is obvious. Here we investigate whether the high-glucose uptake of hypoxic tumours could lead to such a treatment. Before any treatment can be hypothesised, it is crucial to understand how this glycolytic cancer phenotype fits in with the normal body’s blood glucose cycle. The brain creates the healthy body...
<p>It has been long known that many types of cancers have high metabolic requirements and use reprog...
Contains fulltext : 69585.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The hypoxia-re...
Cellular energy metabolism is one of the main processes affected during the transition from normal t...
Glucose, one of the most important energy sources for living organisms, is first broken down through...
Cancer cells can be distinguished from non-cancer cells by acquired characteristics, often referred ...
Tumor growth causes cancer cells to become hypoxic. A hypoxic condition is a hallmark of cancer. Met...
Most cancers of various tissue origin show large portions suffering from permanent or transient hypo...
In this review we examine the mechanisms (causes) underlying the increased glucose consumption obser...
Selective therapeutic targeting of tumors requires identification of differences between the homeost...
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Cancer is a metabolic disease and the solution of two metablic equations: to produce energy with lim...
Cancer cells require a steady source of metabolic energy in order to continue their uncontrolled gro...
Hypoxic regions within solid tumors harbor cells that are resistant to standard chemo- and radio-the...
Anomalous increase in glycolytic activity defines one of the key metabolic alterations in cancer cel...
Malignant cells are commonly characterised by being capable of invading tissue, growing self-suffici...
<p>It has been long known that many types of cancers have high metabolic requirements and use reprog...
Contains fulltext : 69585.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The hypoxia-re...
Cellular energy metabolism is one of the main processes affected during the transition from normal t...
Glucose, one of the most important energy sources for living organisms, is first broken down through...
Cancer cells can be distinguished from non-cancer cells by acquired characteristics, often referred ...
Tumor growth causes cancer cells to become hypoxic. A hypoxic condition is a hallmark of cancer. Met...
Most cancers of various tissue origin show large portions suffering from permanent or transient hypo...
In this review we examine the mechanisms (causes) underlying the increased glucose consumption obser...
Selective therapeutic targeting of tumors requires identification of differences between the homeost...
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Cancer is a metabolic disease and the solution of two metablic equations: to produce energy with lim...
Cancer cells require a steady source of metabolic energy in order to continue their uncontrolled gro...
Hypoxic regions within solid tumors harbor cells that are resistant to standard chemo- and radio-the...
Anomalous increase in glycolytic activity defines one of the key metabolic alterations in cancer cel...
Malignant cells are commonly characterised by being capable of invading tissue, growing self-suffici...
<p>It has been long known that many types of cancers have high metabolic requirements and use reprog...
Contains fulltext : 69585.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The hypoxia-re...
Cellular energy metabolism is one of the main processes affected during the transition from normal t...