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Cancer Wasting: Brain-Liver Link Found
4 Feb
Summary
- Cachexia, a complex metabolic disorder, affects up to 80% of advanced cancer patients.
- New research suggests cancer cachexia is a neuro-metabolic problem, not just inflammation.
- Targeting the brain-liver nerve pathway offers new hope for cachexia treatment.

Cancer cachexia, a complex metabolic disorder marked by involuntary weight and muscle loss, significantly affects up to 80% of advanced cancer patients and contributes substantially to cancer deaths. Unlike starvation, it involves increased energy expenditure and metabolic breakdown driven by tumor-host biology, rendering simple nutritional support insufficient.
Recent research is challenging the long-held view that inflammatory mediators are the sole cause. Emerging evidence points to a neuro-metabolic origin, where tumor-related inflammation might disrupt nerve signals between the brain and the liver via the vagus nerve. This disruption reprograms the liver's metabolic functions, leading to anorexia, systemic inflammation, and severe wasting.
Studies in experimental models show that interrupting these maladaptive vagal signals or preventing specific liver gene program disruptions can mitigate cachexia. This reframes cachexia as an issue of organ crosstalk gone awry, highlighting the liver's crucial role as the body's metabolic powerhouse.



