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There were some articles recently about pancreatic cancer cells and sugar/glucose levels.
Study: High sugar levels could help pancreatic cancer treatments Story by Maia Belay • 1w

Study: High sugar levels could help pancreatic cancer treatments© Provided by WANE Ft. Wayne
CLEVELAND (WJW) – There’s an urgent need for new ways to treat pancreatic cancer and Ohio researchers are on the cusp of a potential breakthrough.
Early data shows a hyperglycemic state, elevated blood sugar, can make pancreatic cancer more responsive to chemotherapy, according to researchers at University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center and Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
“Those with higher glucose levels, diabetics, uncontrolled sugar, actually live longer while getting chemotherapy,” said Dr. Jordan Winter, Chief of Surgical Oncology at University Hospitals. “We’re really excited about this research because it’s an opportunity to improve survival of a very deadly disease without needing to develop a new therapeutic altogether.”
Study analysis showed patients in the high glucose group had a nearly 40% lower risk of dying, despite a higher level of a cancer antigen compared to people with normal glucose levels.
Winter said pancreatic cancer is difficult to treat. It’s also one of the most deadly. Less than 60,000 people are diagnosed every year, and about 95% of people with the illness die.
“Pancreatic cancer is the 12th most common cancer in the United States, but it’s now the second leading cause of cancer-related death — or third leading cause, soon to surpass colon cancer, in the next couple years,” said Winter.
Sugar, researchers said, is a relatively low-cost intervention that could bypass the yearslong process for developing a new treatment.
“The cost of developing new drugs is over a billion dollars, sometimes multiple billions of dollars and can take 10 to 20 years,” said Winter. “So if you have an intervention that could impact survival without developing a new drug, that is potentially a big breakthrough in our field.”
Clinical trials are expected to begin in 2024, Winter said.
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Found this interesting since the pancreas produces insulin and since most references before spoke of cancer feeding off sugar!

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Replies to "There were some articles recently about pancreatic cancer cells and sugar/glucose levels. Study: High sugar levels..."

And that's why I ask cause I think I read somewhere on this Mayo Clinic site, that ALL cells need sugar, not just cancer cells. So, cancer cells feeding off sugar is a myth. I hope so, cause I like my sweets! (It's been 4+ years since my Whipple procedure, and 3.5 years since completing 6 months of chemo)

Interesting article. I wonder if there are any other articles out there relative to that research. I’m a hard diabetic after my distal surgery so that would be great news if other research confirms it. Cancer cells which are mutant and rapidly multiply do require sugar (energy) for growth so this is interesting news for a sugar liver like me!