A successful aging could be gained by life satisfaction, social functioning, or psychological resources and, definitely, by increasing resistance to diverse age-related pathologies. Nowadays, cancer can be considered an age-related disease since the incidence of most cancers increases with age, rising more rapidly beginning in midlife. Although adults with extended longevity are less likely to develop cancer, it is now emerging that aging and cancer share common molecular links, and thus targeting these mechanisms may be suitable to treat multiple disorders, for the prolonging of healthy aging. At present, one of the cornerstones of antiaging is hormone-replacement therapy to treat diseases associated with a state of age-related sex-hormone deficiency in women and men; however, many studies question the relationship of hormone replacement to cancer recurrence. Here, we discuss signaling and metabolic molecular crossroad linking aging and cancer. This is useful to argue about the current knowledge of prolongevity and druggable targets and to motivate specific intervention strategies that could modify practices of the aging population, activating multiple longevity pathways but keeping track of cancer pathways, thereby potentially preserving health status.

Is the secret for a successful aging to keep track of cancer pathways? / Tramontano, D.; De Amicis, F.. - In: JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0021-9541. - 233:11(2018), pp. 8467-8476. [10.1002/jcp.26825]

Is the secret for a successful aging to keep track of cancer pathways?

Tramontano D.;
2018

Abstract

A successful aging could be gained by life satisfaction, social functioning, or psychological resources and, definitely, by increasing resistance to diverse age-related pathologies. Nowadays, cancer can be considered an age-related disease since the incidence of most cancers increases with age, rising more rapidly beginning in midlife. Although adults with extended longevity are less likely to develop cancer, it is now emerging that aging and cancer share common molecular links, and thus targeting these mechanisms may be suitable to treat multiple disorders, for the prolonging of healthy aging. At present, one of the cornerstones of antiaging is hormone-replacement therapy to treat diseases associated with a state of age-related sex-hormone deficiency in women and men; however, many studies question the relationship of hormone replacement to cancer recurrence. Here, we discuss signaling and metabolic molecular crossroad linking aging and cancer. This is useful to argue about the current knowledge of prolongevity and druggable targets and to motivate specific intervention strategies that could modify practices of the aging population, activating multiple longevity pathways but keeping track of cancer pathways, thereby potentially preserving health status.
2018
Is the secret for a successful aging to keep track of cancer pathways? / Tramontano, D.; De Amicis, F.. - In: JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0021-9541. - 233:11(2018), pp. 8467-8476. [10.1002/jcp.26825]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/769367
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