Blocking ActRIIB and restoring appetite reverses cachexia and improves survival in mice with lung cancer

André Lima Queiroz(Cornell University), Ezequiel Dantas(Cornell University), Shakti Ramsamooj(Cornell University), Anirudh Murthy(Cornell University), Mujmmail Ahmed(Cornell University), Elizabeth R. M. Zunica(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Roger J. Liang(Cornell University), Jessica Murphy(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Corey D. Holman(Cornell University), Curtis J. Bare(Cornell University), Gregory Ghahramani(Cornell University), Zhidan Wu(Pfizer (United States)), David E. Cohen(Cornell University), John P. Kirwan(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Lewis C. Cantley(Cornell University), Christopher L. Axelrod(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Marcus D. Goncalves(Cornell University)
Nature Communications
August 8, 2022
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer cachexia is a common, debilitating condition with limited therapeutic options. Using an established mouse model of lung cancer, we find that cachexia is characterized by reduced food intake, spontaneous activity, and energy expenditure accompanied by muscle metabolic dysfunction and atrophy. We identify Activin A as a purported driver of cachexia and treat with ActRIIB-Fc, a decoy ligand for TGF-β/activin family members, together with anamorelin (Ana), a ghrelin receptor agonist, to reverse muscle dysfunction and anorexia, respectively. Ana effectively increases food intake but only the combination of drugs increases lean mass, restores spontaneous activity, and improves overall survival. These beneficial effects are limited to female mice and are dependent on ovarian function. In agreement, high expression of Activin A in human lung adenocarcinoma correlates with unfavorable prognosis only in female patients, despite similar expression levels in both sexes. This study suggests that multimodal, sex-specific, therapies are needed to reverse cachexia.


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