Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer type worldwide with ~ 1.8 million deaths per-year. Smoking accounts for ~ 85% of all cases, with a described joint effect with unhealthy diet in lung cancer risk increase. Public health policies to prevent carcinogens exposure, promote smoking cessation and advocacy for healthy nutrition, are therefore highly recommended. Here we have examined the benefits of the Mediterranean Diet (MedDiet) in protecting against some non-communicable diseases including lung cancer, highlighting the epidemiological and biomolecular aspects of MedDiet anti-inflammatory effect and its interaction with smoking habits closely linked to risk of lung cancer. Considering the high incidence and mortality rates of lung cancer, we discussed also about the global impact that a Planeterranean extension of the benefits of MedDiet could have on controlling lung cancer risk. We also debated the impact of personalized nutrition on lung cancer prevention, considering individual heterogeneity in response to diet plans as well as recent advancements on nutri-omics in lung cancer research, with a specific focus on the role of microRNAs (miRNAs) as a promising nutritional molecular hub for lung cancer prevention. We strongly believe that a deep understanding of the molecular link between food components and genetic/epigenetics factors can expand effective intervention strategies.

Cuttano, R., Mazzarelli, F., Afanga, K., Bianchi, F., Dama, E. (2024). MicroRNAs and the Mediterranean diet: a nutri-omics perspective for lung cancer. JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 22(1) [10.1186/s12967-024-05454-7].

MicroRNAs and the Mediterranean diet: a nutri-omics perspective for lung cancer

Afanga, Kuku Miriam;Dama, Elisa
2024

Abstract

Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer type worldwide with ~ 1.8 million deaths per-year. Smoking accounts for ~ 85% of all cases, with a described joint effect with unhealthy diet in lung cancer risk increase. Public health policies to prevent carcinogens exposure, promote smoking cessation and advocacy for healthy nutrition, are therefore highly recommended. Here we have examined the benefits of the Mediterranean Diet (MedDiet) in protecting against some non-communicable diseases including lung cancer, highlighting the epidemiological and biomolecular aspects of MedDiet anti-inflammatory effect and its interaction with smoking habits closely linked to risk of lung cancer. Considering the high incidence and mortality rates of lung cancer, we discussed also about the global impact that a Planeterranean extension of the benefits of MedDiet could have on controlling lung cancer risk. We also debated the impact of personalized nutrition on lung cancer prevention, considering individual heterogeneity in response to diet plans as well as recent advancements on nutri-omics in lung cancer research, with a specific focus on the role of microRNAs (miRNAs) as a promising nutritional molecular hub for lung cancer prevention. We strongly believe that a deep understanding of the molecular link between food components and genetic/epigenetics factors can expand effective intervention strategies.
Articolo in rivista - Review Essay
Lung cancer; Mediterranean diet; Nutri-omics; Prevention; microRNA
English
7-lug-2024
2024
22
1
632
none
Cuttano, R., Mazzarelli, F., Afanga, K., Bianchi, F., Dama, E. (2024). MicroRNAs and the Mediterranean diet: a nutri-omics perspective for lung cancer. JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 22(1) [10.1186/s12967-024-05454-7].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/491999
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