- Recognize that Glioblastoma, like all cancers, is primarily a mitochondrial metabolic disease, and not a genetic disease.
- Recognize that Glioblastoma is a disease of defective respiration with compensatory fermentation regardless of the cellular or genetic heterogeneity involved.
- Recognize that ketogenic metabolic therapy (KMT) is a cost effective, non-toxic therapeutic strategy that targets and kills tumor cells while protecting and enhancing the energy efficiency in normal cells.
Dr. Seyfried is Professor of Biology at Boston College, and received his PhD in Genetics and Biochemistry from the University of Illinois. He also holds a Master's in Genetics from Illinois State University. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Neurology at the Yale University School of Medicine, and then served on the faculty as an Assistant Professor in Neurology. He has received awards and honors from the National Institutes of Health, the Ketogenic Diet Special Interest Group of the American Epilepsy Society, and many other diverse groups. He has over 185 peer-reviewed publications and is author of the book Cancer as a Metabolic Disease: On the Origin, Management, and Prevention of Cancer (Wiley Press).
summerizer
Glioblastoma reality and why current care fails
- Median survival is near 8–14 months since 1926; John McCain died about 13 months after diagnosis.
- GBM spreads distally through the brain via Scherer infiltration patterns; complete surgical removal is unlikely.
- Death commonly follows rising intracranial pressure; debulking surgery rarely cures because cells already migrated.
- Standard of care uses surgery plus radiotherapy plus temozolomide; survival curves remain poor across institutions and countries.
- Radiotherapy, temozolomide, and steroids can increase glucose/glutamine availability and inflammation in the tumor microenvironment.
- Temozolomide gives modest progression-free benefit while adding toxicity; side effects reduce appetite and calories.
Mitochondrial dysfunction as a root defect
- Electron microscopy shows damaged cristae and abnormal mitochondrial structure in GBM compared with nearby tissue.
- Enzyme and electron-transport abnormalities accompany the structural defects; respiration via oxidative phosphorylation is impaired.
- Genetic heterogeneity is extensive, but aerobic fermentation is shared across tumor cells when respiration is insufficient.
Two fermentable fuels: glucose and glutamine
- Otto Warburg linked cancer growth to aerobic fermentation of glucose to lactate despite oxygen availability.
- Tumor cells also ferment glutamine via glutaminolysis and mitochondrial substrate-level phosphorylation (the Q-effect).
- Glucose feeds glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway; glutamine supplies carbon/nitrogen for biosynthesis and energy.
- Tumor cells cannot rely on fatty acids or ketone bodies when respiration is defective; normal brain tissue can.
Therapeutic goal: lower glucose, raise ketones, reduce inflammation
- Lowering blood glucose slows tumor growth; high glucose accelerates growth, yet clinic diets often include sugar.
- Calorie restriction and restricted ketogenic diets lower glucose and elevate ketones, placing metabolic stress on tumor cells.
- These diets also reduce inflammatory signaling and edema, limiting invasion-supporting microglia/macrophage activity.
Monitoring metabolic targeting with the Glucose Ketone Index
- GKI is the molar ratio of blood glucose to ketones; values near 1.0 or below indicate therapeutic ketosis.
- A Glucose Ketone Index Calculator supports daily tracking; many patients struggle to reach and sustain low GKI values.
Evidence and models
- Two pediatric brain tumor cases on ketogenic diets showed improved quality of life and longer-than-expected survival.
- Mouse models show diet restriction reduces tumor burden and invasion compared with standard high-carbohydrate feeding.
- Combining a restricted ketogenic diet with the glutamine antagonist DON further reduces tumor signal and improves survival in mice.
Press–pulse strategy for metabolic management
- Press therapy keeps glucose low and ketones high over time to stabilize the microenvironment before adding other hits.
- Pulse therapy adds intermittent glutamine targeting and other stressors while the tumor is metabolically constrained.
Human management example and implications
- A 24-month GBM follow-up combined ketogenic metabolic therapy with modified standard care and hyperbaric oxygen; later decline aligned with radiation necrosis.
- The strategy prioritizes ketogenic metabolic therapy as the core platform, using surgery for debulking but avoiding radiotherapy and temozolomide when possible.
- A global society for metabolic therapy is proposed to break stagnation and shift focus toward disease resolution.
References
- [00:00] Cancer as a Metabolic Disease: On the Origin, Management and Prevention of Cancer — https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118310311
- [00:02] A classification of the tumors of the glioma group on a histogenetic basis with a correlated study of prognosis — https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/012447742
- [00:03] THE FORMS OF GROWTH IN GLIOMAS AND THEIR PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE — https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/63.1.1
- [00:08] On the Origin of Cancer Cells — https://doi.org/10.1126/science.123.3191.309
- [00:09] On the Origin of ATP Synthesis in Cancer — https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2020.101761
- [00:11] Mitochondrial Substrate-Level Phosphorylation as Energy Source for Glioblastoma: Review and Hypothesis — https://doi.org/10.1177/1759091418818261
- [00:17] The glucose ketone index calculator: a simple tool to monitor therapeutic efficacy for metabolic management of brain cancer — https://doi.org/10.1186/s12986-015-0009-2
- [00:18] Effects of a ketogenic diet on tumor metabolism and nutritional status in pediatric oncology patients: two case reports — https://doi.org/10.1080/07315724.1995.10718495
- [00:21] Radiotherapy plus concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide for glioblastoma — https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa043330
- [00:23] Does the existing standard of care increase glioblastoma energy metabolism? — https://doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(10)70166-2
- [00:29] Therapeutic benefit of combining calorie-restricted ketogenic diet and glutamine targeting in late-stage experimental glioblastoma — https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-019-0455-x
- [00:38] Management of Glioblastoma Multiforme in a Patient Treated With Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy and Modified Standard of Care: A 24-Month Follow-Up — https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00020
- [00:39] Provocative Question: Should Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy Become the Standard of Care for Glioblastoma? — https://doi.org/10.1007/s11064-019-02795-4

@msokiovt@lemmy.today
Doing some other reading I do see the anti-parasitics having a beneficial impact on fighting cancer. It appears the mechanism of action is interference with cellular pyruvate function, which reduces the cells ability to metabolize glucose, slowing down the rate of growth. This doesn't mean that cancer is a parasite, just that the drugs impact cellular metabolism in a way that demonstrates the warburg hypothesis (i.e. how pet scans work).