Anti-inflammatory/antioxidant use in long-term maintenance cancer therapy: a new therapeutic approach to disease progression and recurrence.
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Crawford, Sarah (Author)
Title
Anti-inflammatory/antioxidant use in long-term maintenance cancer therapy: a new therapeutic approach to disease progression and recurrence.
Abstract
The chronic, progressive clinical characteristics of many adult solid tumor malignancies suggest that a more effective therapeutic approach to cancer management may require long-term intervention using nontoxic systemic agents that block critical components of abnormal tumor physiology. Two highly promising systemic targets common to the development, progression and recurrence of many common cancers are dysregulated inflammatory and oxidation/reduction (redox) pathways. Compelling clinical data support the use of anti-inflammatory and antioxidant agents as a therapeutic modality for long-term use in patients diagnosed with several common cancers, including colon cancer and breast cancer. The therapeutic paradigm presented in this paper is the product of a synthesis of what is currently understood about the biological effects of inflammation and oxidative stress that contribute to tumorigenesis, disease progression and recurrence as well as results obtained from research on the use of prophylactics with anti-inflammatory or antioxidant properties in cancer prevention and treatment.
Publication
Therapeutic advances in medical oncology
Date
2014
Volume
6
Issue
2
Pages
52-68
Journal Abbr
Ther Adv Med Oncol
DOI
Citation Key
crawfordAntiinflammatoryAntioxidantUse2014
ISSN
1758-8340
Language
English
Extra
51 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Place: England
Crawford, Sarah. Cancer Biology Research Laboratory, Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, CT 06515, USA.
Citation
Crawford, S. (2014). Anti-inflammatory/antioxidant use in long-term maintenance cancer therapy: a new therapeutic approach to disease progression and recurrence. Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, 6(2), 52–68. https://doi.org/10/gmvm5m
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