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Cancer poses a major threat to human health and is one of the
leading causes of death worldwide. Today, we know that metastasis,
a multistep process whereby tumour cells spread from the site of
origin to distant organs, is responsible for most cancer mortality.
In fact, more than 90% of cancer-related deaths are attributed to
tumour metastasis. Unfortunately, there are no therapies currently
available to specifically target metastasis of any human cancer
types, and patients with distant metastases ultimately die from
their disease. Current conventional treatment modalities are
focused on the removal of tumours by surgical resection and/or the
killing of malignant cells using cytotoxic chemotherapeutic drugs
or ionizing radiation, with no substantial inhibitory effects on
the migratory and invasive abilities of cancer cells. Moreover,
emerging evidence has shown that these standard treatment modes can
unexpectedly increase the motility and invasiveness of surviving
tumour cells, inducing or accelerating metastases formation and
aggravating malignant progression. This paradoxical phenomenon can
help us to understand why, despite the technological advancements
in surgical procedures and drug delivery methods, the overall
survival rate of numerous cancer types has barely changed over the
past several decades, remaining unacceptably poor. Due to the
insufficiency of existing therapies in improving the prognosis of
cancer patients, new effective treatment options are urgently
needed. To this end, the focus must be moved from a simply
cytotoxic approach to s metastasis-preventing strategy,
substituting the question of why cancer forms and how to kill it
for the question of why tumours spread and how to prevent
metastasis. In this book, a conceptually new approach to cancer
management is presented, by focusing not on the killing of
transformed neoplastic cells, but blocking the spread of tumour
cells to distant organs, thereby restricting malignant progression
and targeting the main cause of cancer-related mortality.
Plant-derived flavonoids might be ideal candidates for novel
antimetastatic agents, as they are non-toxic and possess the
capacity to inhibit multiple steps of metastatic cascade. These
polyphenolic phytochemicals act through regulating a number of
metastasis-associated signalling cascades in different tumour
cells, and also modulate diverse components of tumour
microenvironments and attenuate the formation of tumour-specific
angiogenesis. Moreover, the combination of certain flavonoids with
surgical resection, chemotherapy or radiotherapy may result in the
abolishment of the metastasis-promoting effects of these
conventional therapeutic modalities, providing novel treatment
options for combating cancer in the future. It is expected that the
development of flavonoids for antimetastatic drugs and their
inclusion in further cancer treatment strategies can substantially
improve the prognosis of patients with various types of
malignancies in a time when cancer incidence is predicted to
continuously increase throughout the world. This book should be
read by anyone who is interested in innovative advances in cancer
care. Due to its systemic approach to cellular and molecular
processes of metastatic cascade, this book might serve as a useful
contemporary textbook for medical colleges and universities for
studies of cancer development, progression and dissemination.
In parallel with the continuous rise of cancer incidence, efficient
treatment becomes an increasingly important public health concern.
Radiotherapy has remained one of the most important anticancer
approaches for clinical management of a variety of human tumours,
as at least half of all oncological patients receive this therapy
at some stages of their disease. With the hope to attain greater
anticancer response, the interest in using natural plant-derived
products as complementary treatments to conventional radiotherapy
has substantially increased in the recent years. However, the
interactions between phytochemicals and ionizing radiation are not
always known and can be often unpredictable. Therefore, in this
book, the current findings about the combined treatments of
malignant cells with radiation and flavonoids, the largest group of
human dietary plant polyphenols, are described. These data show
that under carefully chosen dosage-schedule regimens, certain
flavonoids or their natural mixtures can behave as potent
radiosensitizers, augmenting radiotherapeutic efficacy in different
preclinical cancer models. Such radio-sensitising action of
flavonoids can be achieved through modulation of the redox status
and suppression of several cellular survival pathways activated by
radiotherapy, ultimately leading to the death of malignant cells.
As flavonoids can concurrently protect normal healthy cells from
irradiation-induced injury and thereby minimize toxic adverse
reactions, use of these plant-derived agents as complementary
approach to radiotherapy might open new avenues for enhancement of
clinical outcome. Therefore, combining conventional anticancer
modalities with conscious intake of flavonoid supplements as
adjuvant agents might be an important future strategy to boost the
therapeutic success in the treatment of various human malignancies.
Despite intensive work on molecular carcinogenic mechanisms and
novel drug development, cancer has still remained an incurable
disease. With the hope to gain therapeutic advantage or miracle
cure, more than 50% of cancer patients consume various kinds of
herbal supplements when undergoing chemotherapeutic treatment with
antineoplastic agents. However, numerous preclinical studies on
combined treatment of various cancer cells with natural dietary
flavonoids and chemotherapeutic drugs have revealed both desired
(additive to synergistic) as well as undesired (antagonistic)
interactions, meaning that coadministration of flavonoids and
chemotherapeutic drugs can lead to both augmentation as well as
abolishment of therapeutic efficacy. This book is the first one to
systematically compile currently available information about the
modulation of chemotherapeutic efficacy by flavonoids, hopefully
being an assistant for cancer patients to make conscious choices in
selecting proper plant products during chemotherapeutic treatment.
Flavonoids are plant secondary metabolites with a basic
polyphenolic skeleton and anticancer properties have greatly
attracted the interest of scientists already for several years.
This structurally diverse group of phytochemicals can be found
abundantly in various edible plant products, such as fruits and
vegetables, tea and cocoa, nuts, spices, grains and medicinal
herbs. In the past decades, numerous experimental studies have
shown antiproliferative, proapoptotic, antiinflammatory,
antiangiogenic, antiinvasive and antimetastatic activities of these
compounds in different cancerous systems. Because of close contacts
and interactions of ingested food components with the epithelial
lining of organ sites of the upper gastrointestinal tract,
flavonoids can directly affect the development and progression of
malignant neoplasms in the oral cavity, esophagus and stomach. This
book gives a comprehensive and contemporary survey about the
different anticancer actions of various natural and semisynthetic
flavonoids in experimental models of oral, pharyngeal, esophageal
and gastric cancers, involving the data obtained from studies of
both cell lines as well as laboratorial animals. Also, the effects
of flavonoids on the therapeutic responses of conventional cancer
treatment modalities, i.e., different chemotherapeutic drugs and
irradiation, are presented and analyzed. Moreover, the current
epidemiological knowledge about the role of dietary intake of
flavonoids on the risk of carcinogenesis in the upper digestive
tract in populations with different dietary and lifestyle habits is
described. By virtue of the high topicality of the subject but also
the thoroughness of its discussion, this book could be interesting
and attractive to basic scientists working in the field of plant
chemicals, molecular cancer research or design and development of
novel anticancer drugs; synthetic chemists in different
pharmaceutical companies; health workers and nutritional
counselors; medical doctors working with cancer patients; people
suffering from any type of upper digestive tract tumors and their
family members; and anyone who is interested in the natural tools
for the fight against malignant neoplasms and whose purpose is to
consciously prevent carcinogenesis within the upper
gastrointestinal tract.
Cancer is a serious and ever-growing health concern not only in
humans but also in dogs. Considering the differences in average
lifespans, people commonly experience the loss of their companion
dogs, representing a traumatic event to pet owners. On the one
hand, better nutrition and improved care with many recent
advancements in veterinary medicine have allowed dogs to live
longer. On the other hand, this has involved an increased
prevalence of aging-related diseases, including different types of
malignancies. In fact, cancer afflicts one in every three dogs,
being the most common cause of canine death. Hence, dogs with
cancer require treatment, but differently from the human oncology,
there are only few established standards of care for clinical
management of canine tumours, besides the lack of effective drugs.
Research into identification of novel efficient anticancer
compounds and development of new therapeutic options are therefore
highly needed to help man's best friend in combating malignant
neoplasms. Over the past few decades, researchers have paid
attention to the health benefits of various plant secondary
metabolites, leading to the development of several new drugs for
human medicine. Proceeding from this success, in this book, the
current knowledge about anticancer effects of plant-derived
compounds in different canine cancer models is compiled, discussing
the role of phytochemicals in vitro canine cancer cell lines, in
vivo xenografted mice, and in tumour-bearing dogs. Although still
limited, these data reveal a great potential of plant compounds in
reducing proliferation and inducing death of cells derived from
different types of canine tumours, allowing these natural
substances to be considered as promising anticancer drug candidates
for dogs. This approach can not only result in the development of
more efficient therapeutic agents for canine oncology in the
future, but also provide new possibilities for chemopreventive
strategies. Finally, considering the high biological, histological,
and clinical similarities between canine and human tumours,
knowledge on bioactivities of specific phytochemicals in
cancer-bearing dogs can ultimately benefit both species,
accelerating drug development paths for humans and promoting
general advancement of oncological discipline.
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