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      Metformin and Cancer: Solutions to a Real-World Evidence Failure.

      1 , 2 , 3 , 1 , 3 , 4
      Diabetes care
      American Diabetes Association

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          Abstract

          The quest to repurpose metformin, an antidiabetes drug, as an agent for cancer prevention and treatment, which began in 2005 with an observational study that reported a reduction in cancer incidence among metformin users, generated extensive experimental, observational, and clinical research. Experimental studies revealed that metformin has anticancer effects via various pathways, potentially inhibiting cancer cell proliferation. Concurrently, multiple nonrandomized observational studies reported remarkable reductions in cancer incidence and outcomes with metformin use. However, these studies were shown, in 2012, to be affected by time-related biases, such as immortal time bias, which tend to greatly exaggerate the benefit of a drug. The observational studies that avoided these biases did not find an association. Subsequently, the randomized trials of metformin for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and as adjuvant therapy for the treatment of various cancers, advanced or metastatic, did not find reductions in cancer incidence or outcomes. Most recently, the largest phase 3 randomized trial of metformin as adjuvant therapy for breast cancer, which enrolled 3,649 women with a 5-year follow-up, found no benefit for disease-free survival or overall survival with metformin. This major failure of observational real-world evidence studies in correctly assessing the effects of metformin on cancer incidence and outcomes was caused by preventable biases which, surprisingly, are still prominent in 2022. Rigorous approaches for observational studies that emulate randomized trials, such as the incident and prevalent new-user designs along with propensity scores, avoid these biases and can provide more accurate real-world evidence for the repurposing of drugs such as metformin.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Diabetes Care
          Diabetes care
          American Diabetes Association
          1935-5548
          0149-5992
          May 01 2023
          : 46
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] 1Centre for Clinical Epidemiology, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Canada.
          [2 ] 2Division of Endocrinology, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Canada.
          [3 ] 3Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
          [4 ] 4Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
          Article
          148773
          10.2337/dci22-0047
          37185680
          fd15413d-e06d-4285-98f1-214cba6cc1ad
          History

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