ScienceDaily reports that:
Many patients with advanced stages of cancer, AIDS, tuberculosis, and other diseases die from a condition called cachexia, which is characterized as a "wasting" syndrome that causes extreme thinness with muscle weakness. Cachexia is the direct cause of roughly 20% of deaths in cancer patients. While boosting food intake doesn't help, and no effective therapies are available, new research in the Cell Press journal Cell Metabolism points to a promising strategy that may stimulate weight gain and muscle strength.
The research relates to a process that has been gaining considerable attention as a way to combat obesity: the browning of white fat. While white fat normally stores calories, brown fat burns them and generates heat in the process. Therefore, efforts to turn white fat into brown fat may help people lose weight.
Erwin Wagner, of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre in Madrid, and his colleagues found that in mice and patients with cancer-associated cachexia, white fat undergoes significant changes and turns into calorie-burning brown fat. The transformation leads to increased energy consumption and organ wasting.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by physicsmajor on Tuesday July 22 2014, @10:44PM
Cancer sucks. If they figure out what causes this, it could make the secondary effects of cancer suck less. Better quality of life is what terminal patients care about most.
Then, if that wasn't enough, giving that stuff to healthy, obese people could help them lose weight.
It's like the highest impact research ever. Might never see anything from it, but the simple fact that fat can transform given some sort of signal from distant cancer cells makes this at least distantly plausible.