Published January 20, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Association of Metformin Use with Outcomes in Advanced Endometrial Cancer Treated with Chemotherapy

Description

There is increasing evidence that metformin, a commonly used treatment for diabetes, might have the potential to be repurposed as an economical and safe cancer therapeutic. The aim of this study was to determine whether stage III-IV or recurrent endometrial cancer patients who are using metformin during treatment with chemotherapy have improved survival. To test this we analyzed a retrospective cohort of subjects at two independent institutions who received chemotherapy for stage III-IV or recurrent endometrial cancer from 1992 to 2011. Diagnosis of diabetes, metformin use, demographics, endometrial cancer clinico-pathologic parameters, and survival duration were abstracted. The primary outcome was overall survival. The final cohort included 349 patients, 31 (8.9%) had diabetes and used metformin, 28 (8.0%) had diabetes but did not use metformin, and 291 (83.4%) did not have diabetes. The results demonstrate that the median overall survival was 45.6 months for patients with diabetes who used metformin compared to 12.5 months for patients with diabetes who did not use metformin and 28.5 months for patients without diabetes (log-rank test comparing the three groups P = 0.006). In a model adjusted for confounders, the difference in survival between the three groups remained statistically significant (P = 0.023). The improvement in survival among metformin users was not explained by better baseline health status or more aggressive use of chemotherapy. Overall, the findings in this retrospective cohort of endometrial cancer patients with stage III-IV or recurrent disease treated with chemotherapy indicate that patients with diabetes who were concurrently treated with metformin survived longer than patients with diabetes who did not use metformin.

Data availability

Due to institutional review board (IRB) regulations and concern for patient privacy, we cannot make the minimal data set publicly available. Readers may contact the corresponding author to request data and, if the University of Chicago and NorthShore University Health Systems Institutional Data Access/Ethics Committees approve, the data will be made available to interested researchers.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0147145
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7468

Funding

National Cancer Institute
P50 CA136393
National Cancer Institute
T32 CA009566
National Cancer Institute
K12 CA139160
CTSA
ITM CS UL1 RR024999
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
2K12HD000849-26
National Cancer Institute
CA014599
Entertainment Industry Foundation National Women's Cancer Research Alliance Program
American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology
University of Chicago
National Institutes of Health
UL1 TR000430

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Public Health Sciences