The anaemia of cancer: death by a thousand cuts

JL Spivak - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2005 - nature.com
JL Spivak
Nature Reviews Cancer, 2005nature.com
Cancer has a negative systemic impact on its host in addition to its local or metastatic effects,
and no cancer complication is more ubiquitous than anaemia, a condition for which there is
now a specific remedy, the recombinant growth factor erythropoietin. This is not a trivial
therapeutic consideration, because cancer-associated anaemia has an adverse influence
on survival regardless of tumour type. However, the pharmacological correction of anaemia
with recombinant erythropoietin could promote tumour growth, whereas the use of tumour …
Abstract
Cancer has a negative systemic impact on its host in addition to its local or metastatic effects, and no cancer complication is more ubiquitous than anaemia, a condition for which there is now a specific remedy, the recombinant growth factor erythropoietin. This is not a trivial therapeutic consideration, because cancer-associated anaemia has an adverse influence on survival regardless of tumour type. However, the pharmacological correction of anaemia with recombinant erythropoietin could promote tumour growth, whereas the use of tumour-necrosis factor-α (TNFα) and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand as antitumour agents could exacerbate anaemia, thereby perpetuating tissue hypoxia and tumour progression.
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