Audio By Carbonatix
A "fatty apron" in the abdomen helps fuel the spread of ovarian cancer, research suggests.
In 80% of cases, it has spread to this apron, called the omentum, by the time it is diagnosed.
The Nature Medicine research found once ovarian cancer cells reach the omentum, they take it over.
UK experts said the study was important in aiding understanding of ovarian cancer, the fifth most common cancer in women in the UK.
The omentum lies in the upper abdomen near the stomach. It helps support the organs nearby, but it is not essential.
Often, cancer growth in the omentum exceeds the growth of the original ovarian tumour.
The University of Chicago team injected ovarian cancer cells into the abdomen of healthy mice. They reached the omentum within 20 minutes.
They found that protein signals emitted by the omentum attracted the tumour cells. Disturbing these signals reduced this attraction by at least 50%.
Once ovarian cancer cells reach the omentum, they were found to change so they could feed off the fat cells.
Feeding cancer spread
The researchers suggest that a protein known as fatty acid binding protein (FABP4), a fat carrier, could be key to the process and could be a target for treatment.
Tumour cells next to fat cells in the omentum were found to produce high levels of FABP4, while cancer cells far away from fat cells did not.
When the action of FABP4 was blocked, the transfer of nutrients from fat cells to cancer cells was drastically reduced. It also reduced tumour growth and the ability of tumours to generate new blood vessels.
Lead author Ernst Lengyel, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of Chicago, said: "The cells that make up the omentum contain the biological equivalent of jet fuel.
"They feed the cancer cells, enabling them to multiply rapidly. Gaining a better understanding of this process could help us learn how to disrupt it."
The researchers suggest fat metabolism may also contribute to other cancers, such as breast, gastric and colon.
Dr Kat Arney, of Cancer Research UK, said: "These are important results because they suggest that fat cells in the stomach can fuel the spread of ovarian cancer, and point towards potential targets for the development of new treatments for the disease.
"But at the moment these are still early experiments using mice and cells grown in the lab, so there's still a lot of work to be done to turn this knowledge into a treatment that could help women with ovarian cancer."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Inusah Fuseini defends NDC Council of Elders’ intervention to safeguard party unity
31 minutes -
Reimagining ECOWAS leadership for a fragmented and uncertain West Africa
32 minutes -
Bank of Ghana considering sale of new $260M Headquarters – Sources
38 minutes -
World Hunger Day: ‘The end of hunger is in our own hands’
48 minutes -
Pupils sent home as teachers’ strike disrupts learning in 80 Tarkwa schools
56 minutes -
There are no divisions in NDC – Godwin Ako Gunn
59 minutes -
What Is Wrong with Us: Why we keep chasing payslips while ignoring the payrolls that create them
1 hour -
Patoranking teams up with Ruger for new afro-dancehall single ‘Shake That’
1 hour -
Africa’s climate negotiators put health at the centre of climate action ahead of Bonn talks
2 hours -
Mahama’s involvement in Council of Elders’ directive signals concern over NDC divisions – Haruna Mohammed
2 hours -
Barekese youth threaten dump site blockade over alleged denial of 24-hour market
2 hours -
GES releases 2026/2027 academic calendar for Senior High Schools
2 hours -
Iran warns Israeli attacks in Lebanon threaten ceasefire with US
2 hours -
GhIE calls for radical shift in Ghana’s flood management strategy as urban flooding worsens
2 hours -
Judge me by results, not my personal qualities – Carlos Queiroz
2 hours