We have recently examined the issues of inflammation and cancer as well as the microbiome and cancer. A long standing relationship is with obesity and cancer. Obesity increases inflammation as well as altering the microbiome. Science notes:
Obesity-associated inflammation (OAI) can dramatically alter tissue
composition, thereby creating a fertile soil for cancer development; it
is conceivable that these changes may lower mutational and epigenetic
barriers to tumorigenesis. For instance, in breast and pancreas,
OAI is associated with altered extracellular matrix composition that
facilitates transformation of premalignant cells. In the colon,
epigenetic alterations that occur in cancer are observed in normal
epithelial cells in the context of obesity, thus lowering the mutational threshold that is required for malignant transformation.
These studies suggest that OAI “primes” both the tissue
microenvironment and premalignant epithelial cells to facilitate
oncogenic transformation. Indeed, obesity is often associated with
specific molecular subtypes of cancer,
which may reflect a selective pressure exerted by the obese
microenvironment resulting in the altered fitness of specific oncogenic
mutations. Accordingly, tumors that evolve within an obese
microenvironment may exhibit “obesity addiction” whereby they are driven
by a dependency on hypernutrition and inflammatory cytokines.
It is interesting that fifty years ago we were all worried about the lack of food for humans. Now we have a massive explosion of obesity. Food seems no longer to be a global issue. But the sequellae from excess food may very well be more dire.