Current Issue
Volume: 122
Number: 4
Index: July 2010
Clinical Focus: Neurological disorders and depression
Call For Papers
September 2010
Clinical Focus: ADHD, Allergies, Immunization, and Diabetes
  • Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder:
    • ADHD
      • Treating children, adolescents, and adults
      • Pharmacotherapy options
      • Switching medication dosages
      • Treating ADHD in patients with concomitant disorders
      • Clinical trial developments
    • Oppositional defiant disorder
  • Immunization and pediatrics:
    • Vaccinations for infants, children, and adults:
      • HPV
      • Meningococcal
      • Influenza
    • Physical examinations for back-to-school
    • Allergy medications
    • Treating asthma in children and adolescents
  • Diabetes:
    • Juvenile diabetes
    • New drug developments for type 1 and type 2 diabetes
    • Pen devices
    • Managing diabetes in patients with concomitant disorders:
      • Obesity
      • Metabolic syndrome
      • Cardiovascular disease
      • Chronic kidney disease
      • Hypertension
    • Clinical trials, DPP-4 inhibitors, and investigational drugs
    • Diabetes in different patient populations:
      • African Americans
      • Hispanics
    • Diabetic complications:
      • Hypoglycemia
      • Macrovascular
      • Nephropathy Ocular
Submission deadline: August 02
Fast-Track deadline: August 10
About
Fast-Track peer review is available for those papers requiring immediate review (for an additional fee). Complete peer review is finalized in 1-2 weeks and comments are provided to the author within 72 hours of their receipt by the editorial office. Authors are asked to submit a revised manuscript within 10-12 days. Accepted manuscripts are processed within 2-3 weeks, published online within 3 business days of final author approval, and in print in the next available issue.
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doi: 10.3810/pgm.2010.05.2153
Postgraduate Medicine: Volume 122: No.3
Insulin—Carcinogen or Mitogen? Preclinical and Clinical Evidence from Prostate, Breast, Pancreatic, and Colorectal Cancer Research
Rosemary Call, BPharm; Molly Grimsley, BPharm; Lucy Cadwallader, BPharm; Laura Cialone, BPharm; Matt Hill, BPharm; Vera Hreish, BPharm; S. Travis King, PharmD; And Daniel M. Riche, Pharm, BCPS, DCDE
Abstract: Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease that affects > 23.6 million Americans, and occurs when the body is unable to produce or becomes resistant to endogenous insulin. This alteration of insulin’s action reduces adequate utilization of glucose transporter type 4 (GLUT4) receptors, which are responsible for cellular glucose uptake. Thus, exogenous administration of human insulin and insulin analogs is an important modality used to reduce morbidity and mortality in both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. According to 2007 estimates, 27% of all patients with diabetes use some form of insulin therapy. The increasing utilization of insulin has become a cause for concern because findings from several observational trials have suggested an association with an increased risk of developing cancer. To help elucidate the potential interplay between insulin use and cancer, we searched PubMed and MEDLINE to identify articles that assessed the carcinogenic and/or mitogenic potential of diabetes treatments, focusing on insulin specifically. Data from our review suggest that insulin analogs, particularly insulin glargine, may play more of a mitogenic than a carcinogenic role in association with different types of cancer, suggesting an amplified rate of existing tumor growth in the presence of insulin analogs. Evidence for insulin-induced mitogenicity appears to be most prevalent in prostate, breast, pancreatic, and colorectal cancers. In conclusion, the positive effects of insulin therapy on reducing morbidity and mortality in diabetes greatly outweigh the risks at this time. However, clinicians must be diligent in both screening for new cancers in patients receiving insulin and in monitoring for tumor growth or maintenance of remission in patients with existing cancers.

Keywords: diabetes; cancer risk; IGF-1; insulin; glargine; prostate cancer; breast cancer; pancreatic cancer; colorectal cancer

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