Good Vitamin D receptor reduced bladder cancer and cisplatin deaths
Vitamin D3 enhances the response to cisplatin in bladder cancer through VDR and TAp73 signaling crosstalk
Cancer Medicine: 10 April 2019 https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2119
Brittany L. Bunch Yingyu Ma Kristopher Attwood Lauren Amable Wei Luo Carl Morrison Khurshid A. Guru Anna Woloszynska‐Read … See all authors
Items in both categories Cancer - Bladder and Vitamin D Receptor are listed here:
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Chemotherapy and Cisplatin
* Chemotherapy (cisplatin) and vitamin D synergistically stop stomach cancer – Feb 2014
* Chemotheraphy not work as well with low Vitamin D (colon cancer this time) – Aug 2018
* Similar to the Bladder Cancer study on this page
* Chemotherapy and vitamin D - many studies cisplatin is mentioned several times
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1. Items in both categories Vitamin D Receptor and Cancer
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1. Vitamin D Receptor had the following - April 2019
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| Riskincrease | Cancer | | 4.6 | Breast Cancer 16.9 X another study | | 3.1 | Colon Cancer survival | | 2.7 | Gastric Cancer | | 2.4 | Lung Cancer | | 1.6 | Prostate Cancer while black | Vitamin D Receptor table shows what compensates for low VDR activation {include}
📄 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki


Suspect that >20ng Vitamin D PLUS Good Vitamin D receptor would be even better
Background
Vitamin D3 (VitD) deficiency is linked to increased incidence and worse survival in bladder cancer (BCa). In addition to cystectomy, patients are treated with cisplatin‐based chemotherapy, however 30%‐50% of patients do not benefit from this treatment. The effects of VitD deficiency on response to chemotherapy remain unknown.
Methods
To test effects of VitD supplementation on the response to cisplatin we analyzed patient serum VitD levels and correlated that with survival. In vivo, VitD deficient mice were treated with cisplatin, with or without pretreatment with the active VitD metabolite, 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25D3). Lastly, using BCa cell lines, T24 and RT‐112, the mechanism of action of 1,25D3 and cisplatin combination treatment was determined by apoptosis assays, as well as western blot and RT‐PCR.
Results
In this study, we determined that low serum 25 hydroxyvitamin D3 (25D3) levels was significantly associated with worse response to cisplatin. Pretreating deficient mice with 1,25D3, reduced tumor volume compared to cisplatin monotherapy. In vitro, 1,25D3 pretreatment increased the apoptotic response to cisplatin. 1,25D3 pretreatment increased expression of TAp73 and its pro‐apoptotic targets, in a VDR dependent manner. VDR and its transcriptional targets were induced after 1,25D3 treatment and further increased after the combination of 1,25D3 and cisplatin in a TAp73 dependent manner.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that VitD deficiency could be a biomarker for poor response to cisplatin, and pretreating with VitD can increase the apoptotic response to cisplatin through VDR and TAp73 signaling crosstalk.