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    Home»Health»Startling Findings: High-Fructose Corn Syrup Linked to Cancer Growth
    Health

    Startling Findings: High-Fructose Corn Syrup Linked to Cancer Growth

    By Washington University in St. LouisDecember 11, 202418 Comments8 Mins Read
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    Pile of Sugar
    Recent research indicates that the liver converts fructose, increasingly used in modern diets, into nutrients that promote tumor growth in several cancers, suggesting new dietary strategies and therapeutic approaches to combat cancer.

    The liver converts dietary fructose into nutrients that feed tumor growth, linking high-fructose consumption to cancer progression. This finding highlights both dietary caution and potential new cancer treatments.

    Fructose consumption has risen significantly over the past five decades, primarily due to the extensive use of high-fructose corn syrup as a sweetener in beverages and ultra-processed foods. Recent research from Washington University in St. Louis reveals that dietary fructose promotes tumor growth in animal models of melanoma, breast cancer, and cervical cancer. However, the study, published on Dec. 4 in the journal Nature, indicates that fructose does not directly fuel tumors.

    Instead, WashU scientists discovered that the liver converts fructose into usable nutrients for cancer cells, a compelling finding that could open up new avenues for care and treatment of many different types of cancer.

    “The idea that you can tackle cancer with diet is intriguing,” said Gary Patti, the Michael and Tana Powell Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences and a professor of genetics and of medicine at the School of Medicine, all at WashU.

    Gary Patti
    Gary Patti, the Michael and Tana Powell Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences and a professor of genetics and of medicine at the School of Medicine, all at WashU. Credit: WashU

    “When we think about tumors, we tend to focus on what dietary components they consume directly. You put something in your body, and then you imagine that the tumor takes it up,” Patti said. “But humans are complex. What you put in your body can be consumed by healthy tissue and then converted into something else that tumors use.”

    “Our initial expectation was that tumor cells metabolize fructose just like glucose, directly utilizing its atoms to build new cellular components such as DNA. We were surprised that fructose was barely metabolized in the tumor types we tested,” said the study’s first author, Ronald Fowle-Grider, a postdoctoral fellow in Patti’s lab. “We quickly learned that the tumor cells alone don’t tell the whole story. Equally important is the liver, which transforms fructose into nutrients that the tumors can use.”

    Using metabolomics — a method of profiling small molecules as they move through cells and across different tissues in the body — the researchers concluded that one way in which high levels of fructose consumption promote tumor growth is by increasing the availability of circulating lipids in the blood. These lipids are building blocks for the cell membrane, and cancer cells need them to grow.

    “We looked at numerous different cancers in various tissues throughout the body, and they all followed the same mechanism,” Patti said.

    The corn syrup era

    Scientists have long recognized that cancer cells have a strong affinity for glucose, a simple sugar that is the body’s preferred carbohydrate-based energy source.

    In terms of its chemical structure, fructose is similar to glucose. They are both common types of sugar, with the same chemical formula, but they differ in how the body metabolizes them. Glucose is processed throughout the whole body, while fructose is almost entirely metabolized by the small intestine and liver.

    Both sugars are found naturally in fruits, vegetables, dairy products and grains. They are also added as sweeteners in many processed foods. Fructose, in particular, has penetrated the American diet over the last few decades. It is favored by the food industry because it is sweeter than glucose.

    Prior to the 1960s, people consumed relatively little fructose compared with today’s numbers. A century ago, an average person consumed just 5-10 pounds of fructose per year. To put it in familiar terms, that is roughly equal to the weight of a gallon of milk. In the 21st century, that number has increased to be as high as the equivalent of 15 gallons of milk.

    “If you go through your pantry and look for the items that contain high-fructose corn syrup, which is the most common form of fructose, it is pretty astonishing,” said Patti, who is also a research member of the Siteman Cancer Center, based at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and WashU Medicine, and the Center for Human Nutrition at WashU Medicine.

    “Almost everything has it. It’s not just candy and cake, but also foods such as pasta sauce, salad dressing and ketchup,” he said. “Unless you actively seek to avoid it, it’s probably part of your diet.”

    Cancer’s appetite for fructose

    Given the rapid rise in the consumption of dietary fructose over recent decades, the WashU researchers wanted to know more about how fructose impacts the growth of tumors.

    Patti and Fowle-Grider began their investigation by feeding tumor-bearing animals a diet rich in fructose, then measuring how quickly their tumors grew. The researchers found that added fructose promoted tumor growth without changing body weight, fasting glucose, or fasting insulin levels.

    “We were surprised to see that it had a rather dramatic impact. In some cases, the growth rate of the tumors accelerated by two-fold or even higher,” Patti said. “Eating a lot of fructose was clearly very bad for the progression of these tumors.”

    Ronald Fowle Grider
    Ronald Fowle-Grider, postdoctoral fellow in chemistry, Washington University in St. Louis. Credit: WashU

    But the next step in their experiments initially stumped them. When Fowle-Grider attempted to repeat a version of this test by feeding fructose to cancer cells isolated in a dish, the cells did not respond. “In most cases, they grew almost as slowly as if we gave them no sugar at all,” Patti said.

    So, Patti and Fowle-Grider went back to looking at changes in the small molecules in the blood of animals fed high-fructose diets. Using metabolomics, they identified elevated levels of a variety of lipid species, including lysophosphatidylcholines (LPCs). Additional dish tests showed that liver cells that were fed fructose release LPCs.

    “Interestingly, the cancer cells themselves were unable to use fructose readily as a nutrient because they do not express the right biochemical machinery,” Patti said. “Liver cells do. This allows them to convert fructose into LPCs, which they can secrete to feed tumors.”

    A defining characteristic of cancer is uncontrolled proliferation of malignant cells. Each time a cell divides, it must replicate its contents, including membranes. This requires a substantial amount of lipids. While lipids can be synthesized from scratch, it is much easier for cancer cells to simply take lipids up from their surrounding environment.

    “Over the past few years, it’s become clear that many cancer cells prefer to take up lipids rather than make them,” Patti noted. “The complication is that most lipids are insoluble in blood and require rather complex transport mechanisms. LPCs are unique. They might provide the most effective and efficient way to support tumor growth.”

    Avoiding fructose

    Interestingly, over the same period of time when human fructose consumption has surged, a number of cancers have become increasingly more prevalent among people under the age of 50. This raises the question whether the trends are linked. With $25 million in support from Cancer Grand Challenges, Patti recently teamed up with Yin Cao, an associate professor of surgery at WashU Medicine, and other investigators from around the world, none of whom were involved in this study, to investigate possible connections.

    “It will be exciting to better understand how dietary fructose influences cancer incidence. But one take-home message from this current study is that if you are unfortunate enough to have cancer, then you probably want to think about avoiding fructose. Sadly, that is easier said than done,” Patti said.

    Aside from dietary intervention, the study authors said that this research could help us develop a way to prevent fructose from driving tumor growth therapeutically, using drugs.

    “An implication of these findings is that we do not have to limit ourselves to therapeutics that only target disease cells,” Patti said. “Rather, we can think about targeting the metabolism of healthy cells to treat cancer. This has worked with mice in our study, but we would like to take advantage of our observations and try to improve the lives of patients.”

    The study authors are working with clinical partners at WashU Medicine to explore a clinical trial related to fructose in the diet.

    Reference: “Dietary fructose enhances tumour growth indirectly via interorgan lipid transfer” by Ronald Fowle-Grider, Joe L. Rowles III, Isabel Shen, Yahui Wang, Michaela Schwaiger-Haber, Alden J. Dunham, Kay Jayachandran, Matthew Inkman, Michael Zahner, Fuad J. Naser, Madelyn M. Jackstadt, Jonathan L. Spalding, Sarah Chiang, Kyle S. McCommis, Roland E. Dolle, Eva T. Kramer, Sarah M. Zimmerman, George P. Souroullas, Brian N. Finck, Leah P. Shriver, Charles K. Kaufman, Julie K. Schwarz, Jin Zhang and Gary J. Patti, 4 December 2024, Nature.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08258-3

    This research was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (R35 ES028365)

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    18 Comments

    1. Prof. Dr. M. Ashraf on December 11, 2024 1:45 am

      Good findings and truth of life. Plants use fructose to convert it more complex molecules while the universe is rich in microbes converting fructose to complex biopolymers while the glucose is used to generate energy. The nature thus already have mechanisms to cancer causing molécule and C sequestration in to long living and persistant complex molecules

      Reply
      • Jane on December 18, 2024 10:18 am

        Thank you all. Make it mainstream.

        Reply
    2. Bernard on December 11, 2024 6:03 am

      Alternate nutrition, supplement and lifestyle based practitioners and science researchers in the area have known about the dangers of high fructose for decades. About time you caught up

      Reply
      • AlexV on December 17, 2024 9:10 am

        Whaaaaat!? So crazy! Almost as if the science finally agrees with what literally everyone has been saying since the 80s.

        >.>

        Reply
    3. Ridi James on December 11, 2024 3:30 pm

      Not “startling.” Expected. Correlation isn’t necessarily causation, but come on, man…

      Reply
      • John on December 16, 2024 9:50 am

        The title was completely misleading. The study doesn’t look at high fructose corn syrup It looks at fructose.

        Reply
    4. Jon on December 12, 2024 7:04 am

      This is ancient science. Maybe you look into the huge industry of sugar and how they’ve been suppressing information and saying more research is necessary just like the big cigarette companies did? Please this is not revolutionary.

      Reply
    5. Brian on December 12, 2024 7:12 am

      This article misleadingly isolates high fructose corn syrup but doesn’t talk about sucrose which also contains fructose in nearly the same proportions to glucose and is widely consumed. Metabolically sucrose and high fructose corn syrup are nearly identical and I’d expect them to have similar effects on the cancer.

      It didn’t even sound like the study addressed high fructose corn syrup specifically so it is unclear why so much of the article focuses on this single ingredient.

      Reply
      • Clyde Spencer on December 13, 2024 12:32 pm

        According to Wikipedia, “It [white table sugar] has a purity [sucrose] higher than 99.7%.” Even if the remaining 0.3% has some fructose, I’m sure it isn’t all fructose. More likely contaminants are plant ash, bone char, and common dirt. Glucose and Fructose are monosaccharides, while sucrose is a disaccharide.

        I would appreciate seeing a citation for your claim.

        Reply
        • Sondra on December 18, 2024 5:56 am

          Sucrose is half glucose, half fructose

          Reply
    6. Paul on December 12, 2024 7:50 am

      That’s impossible. Specialists have said that high fructose co4n syrup is sugar, period. And sugar is sugar.
      Just like hydrogenated palm oil is no different than regular oil.
      And study after _______ (company funded fill in the blank) study shows that anything the can make massive amounts of money for corporations is not good, not great, but fantastically healthy for consumers.
      Got it.

      Reply
      • Rob on December 13, 2024 4:03 pm

        It’s better for the worm drive of a Sunbeam shaft drive 500cc twin m/cycle. Ordinary gear oil wrecks the bronze worm.

        Reply
    7. Raziel on December 12, 2024 8:11 am

      “startling finding” what a joke. It’s pretty obvious actually.

      Reply
    8. Smith on December 12, 2024 9:04 am

      1948 it was recommended to stop nursing your baby and give a formula made with corn syrup, needless to say I nearly died was labeled with Celiac WHICH IT WASNT and nearly died..certainly caused great damage…..

      Reply
    9. Mikael-Europe on December 14, 2024 12:31 am

      Any person knows this….why is this news ???

      Reply
    10. Fred Flintstone on December 18, 2024 5:35 am

      I learned from drinking beer and getting heart burn that they were putting fructose in beer specifically MGD. SO I switched to budweiser and the problem went away. I avoid anything with corn syrup in it and Thank God I was able to figure it out.

      Reply
    11. Gary Webb on December 18, 2024 6:57 am

      Now I know why Hispanics from Mexico wanted to drink real Coca Cola from Mexico made from real cane sugar. To avoid the High Fructose Corn Syrup. I remember how on the job they used a huge round saucer to cook meat an chicken with veggies in olive oil and real corn tortillas for fajita. Avoided the processed food from Fast Food joints. I noticed| lower Cancer rates in less developed countries. This needs studied more.

      Reply
    12. Larry on December 18, 2024 11:45 am

      Not startling at all. People have know about this for a long time, just like smoking. It is a crime it is in food, along with titanium dioxide. Craziness.

      Reply
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