abstract
Cancer is a
key health issue across the world, causing substantial patient morbidity
and mortality. Patient prognosis is tightly linked with metastatic
dissemination of the disease to distant sites, with metastatic diseases
accounting for a vast percentage of cancer patient mortality. While
advances in this area have been made, the process of cancer metastasis
and the factors governing cancer spread and establishment at secondary
locations is still poorly understood. The current article summarizes
recent progress in this area of research, both in the understanding of
the underlying biological processes and in the therapeutic strategies
for the management of metastasis. This review lists the disruption of
E-cadherin and tight junctions, key signaling pathways, including
urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPA), phosphatidylinositol
3-kinase/v-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene (PI3K/AKT), focal adhesion
kinase (FAK), β-catenin/zinc finger E-box binding homeobox 1 (ZEB-1) and
transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), together with inactivation of
activator protein-1 (AP-1) and suppression of matrix metalloproteinase-9
(MMP-9) activity as key targets and the use of phytochemicals, or
natural products, such as those from Agaricus blazei, Albatrellus
confluens, Cordyceps militaris, Ganoderma lucidum, Poria cocos and
Silybum marianum, together with diet derived fatty acids gamma linolenic
acid (GLA) and eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and inhibitory compounds as
useful approaches to target tissue invasion and metastasis as well as
other hallmark areas of cancer. Together, these strategies could
represent new, inexpensive, low toxicity strategies to aid in the
management of cancer metastasis as well as having holistic effects
against other cancer hallmarks.
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