image of prostate cells as seen under a microscope

Diabetes Drug for Prostate Cancer? Columbia Study Provides Clarity

In the years since a 2005 study found that diabetes patients taking metformin had lower rates of cancer, oncologists have been excited by the prospect of using the inexpensive, safe, and widely used diabetes drug to prevent or slow the development of many cancers.

But in studies of prostate cancer, metformin performance has been mixed, with some studies reporting a lower incidence of prostate cancer among men using metformin and others finding no relationship.

Now a new study from Columbia researchers suggests that metformin is indeed a promising drug that could prevent the progression of prostate cancer, but only for tumors with low levels of NKX3.1, which are more likely to develop into aggressive cancers.

“Until this study no one understood this essential aspect of metformin and which patients could benefit,” says Columbia oncologist Mark Stein, MD, who is helping design a clinical trial to test the idea in newly diagnosed patients but was not involved in the new study.

“The new work reinvigorates the idea of using this safe and inexpensive drug in a way that could benefit prostate cancer patients, potentially sparing them from additional treatment, and allows us to test the drug in a more focused way.”

The researchers found that metformin restores cancer-fighting mitochondrial activity that is lost when NKX3.1 levels are low, prevents prostate cancer progression in mice, and is associated with better survival in patients with low-NKX3.1 tumors but not high-NKX3.1 tumors.

“Where we see metformin having the biggest impact is in patients who’ve just been diagnosed with prostate cancer,” says Alex Papachristodoulou, PhD, associate research scientist, who conducted the research in the lab of Cory Abate-Shen, PhD, chair of the Department of Molecular Pharmacology & Therapeutics.

Most patients with new diagnoses of prostate cancer have low-grade tumors that are not treated and are instead monitored by active surveillance. But some of these tumors will become more aggressive and potentially life-threatening.

“Metformin could be given to patients under surveillance with high-risk tumors when there’s still time to prevent progression to advanced disease,” Abate-Shen says.

The mitochondria connection

The idea to test metformin and its interaction with NKX3.1 developed from Papachristodoulou and Abate-Shen’s previous study, which revealed how low levels of the protein promote prostate cancer.

Low levels of NKX3.1 have been linked with aggressive disease for years, but it was unclear why the deficiency drove cancer development. Papachristodoulou and Abate-Shen found that when prostate cells are under oxidative stress (as happens during prostate cancer development), NKX3.1 moves into the cells’ mitochrondria to reduce the stress and protect the cells. If NKX3.1 levels are low, less protection is available, and prostate cells are more likely to turn malignant.

Alex Papachristodoulou, PhD

Alex Papachristodoulou. Photo: Columbia University Irving Medical Center.

“That’s when we realized how metformin might be able help, since metformin is known to act on the mitochondria,” Papachristodoulou says.

In mice and men, metformin slows prostate cancer

To test metformin’s effect on low-NKX3.1 prostate cancers, the researchers gave metformin to low-NKX3.1 mice that tend to develop prostate cancer.

“These mice mimic the progression from lower- to higher-grade prostate cancer, similar to the cancers found in men who are put on active surveillance,” Papachristodoulou says, “but with metformin, we were able to stop further progression of the cancer.”

The researchers then looked at human prostate cancer cells and tissues, confirming that metformin works on the same mitochondrial processes in people and prevents further cancerous changes.

“The work was very elegant,” says Stein. “The models they have developed to understand the disease were key to answering the question. And to find a whole new mechanism of action for a drug that’s so ubiquitous is very unusual.”

Finally, with the help of long-standing clinical collaborators James McKiernan, Renu Virk, and Mitchell Benson at Columbia, Max Loda at Cornell, and others in Europe, the researchers retrospectively examined the effect of metformin in two groups of men who had been treated for prostate cancer. (Many men in both groups took metformin for their diabetes.)

After measuring NKX3.1 levels in tissue samples from the patients, researchers found that metformin only benefitted patients with low NKX3.1 levels and mitochondrial impairment. Remarkably, among men with low NKX3.1 cancers under active surveillance, those taking metformin (three out of three) had their cancers downgraded during the surveillance period, while three out of four patients who did not take metformin had their cancers upgraded.

Potential to help reduce prostate cancer disparities

Papachristodoulou and Abate-Shen are now working with Stein, McKiernan, Loda, and others to set up a clinical trial to test if metformin can prevent the progression of prostate cancer in men with newly diagnosed, low-NKX3.1 tumors who are under active surveillance.

NKX3.1 levels are not typically measured in men newly diagnosed with prostate cancer, but based on the two cohorts examined, about 50% to 60% of patients may have low expressing NKX3.1 tumors.

Metformin could be particularly helpful for Black men, Papachristodoulou says, because they are more likely than white men to develop aggressive prostate cancer. “Though some of the health disparities are due to socioeconomic and health care inequities, we think there are biological factors like differences in NKX3.1 levels and mitochondria that also contribute,” Papachristodoulou says.

Along with studies to find additional biomarkers that identify patients with the greatest risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer, Papachristodoulou will continue to pursue disparities research in the Abate-Shen lab and his future independent career, with the help of a new K99/R00 grant he received last month.

Mitochondria, he thinks, may provide some answers.

“The search for biomarkers that can predict prostate cancer development and progression has largely focused on the nuclear genome, overlooking the mitochondrial genome,” he says, “but we know that alterations in mitochondrial genes are associated with lethal prostate cancer, particularly in Black men. I’m hoping that with the new grant, I’ll be able to identify more mitochondrial-related biomarkers like NKX3.1 and we can ultimately improve survival.”

References

More information

Top image of human prostate cells from National Cancer Institute.

Cory Abate-Shen also is the Robert Sonneborn Professor of Medicine, professor of urologic sciences (in the Department of Urology), professor of pathology & cell biology (in the Department of Systems Biology), and a member of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Institute for Cancer Genetics at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.

All authors (from Columbia unless noted): Alexandros Papachristodoulou, Isabel Heidegger (Medical University Innsbruck, Austria), Renu K. Virk, Matteo Di Bernardo, Jaime Y. Kim, Caroline Laplaca, Florencia Picech, Georg Schäfer (Medical University Innsbruck), Guarionex Joel De Castro, Hanina Hibshoosh, Massimo Loda (Weill Medical College of Cornell University), Helmut Klocker (Medical University Innsbruck), Mark A. Rubin (University of Bern, Switzerland), Tian Zheng, Mitchell C. Benson, James M. McKiernan, Aditya Dutta (now at the University of Delaware), and Cory Abate-Shen.

Papachristodoulou received support through a Young Investigator Award from the Prostate Cancer Foundation (21YOUN32) and Early Career Development and Postdoctoral Pilot awards from the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC). Research in the Abate-Shen lab was supported by grants from the NIH (R01 CA173481, CA233176, and P01 CA265768) and supported by the HICCC Flow Core and Molecular Pathology Core facilities (funded in part by NIH grant P30CA013696). Max Loda was supported by a grant from the NIH (POCA211024).

The authors report no conflicts of interest.