Regulated pyroptosis is critical for pathogen elimination by inducing infected cell rupture and pro‐inflammatory cytokines secretion, while overwhelmed pyroptosis contributes to organ dysfunction and pathological inflammatory response. Caffeic acid (CA) and ferulic acid (FA) are both well‐known antioxidant and anti‐inflammatory phenolic acids, which resemble in chemical structure. Here we found that CA, but not FA, protects macrophages from both Nigericin‐induced canonical and cytosolic lipopolysaccharide (LPS)‐induced non‐canonical pyroptosis and alleviates LPS‐induced mice sepsis. It significantly improved the survival of pyroptotic cells and LPS‐challenged mice and blocked proinflammatory cytokine secretion. The anti‐pyroptotic effect of CA is independent of its regulations in cellular lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial function, or pyroptosis‐associated gene transcription. Instead, CA arrests pyroptosis by directly associating with gasdermin D (GSDMD) and blocking its processing, resulting in reduced N‐GSDMD pore construction and less cellular content release. In LPS‐induced septic mice, CA inhibits GSDMD activation in peritoneal macrophages and reduces the serum levels of interleukin‐1β and tumor necrosis factor‐α as the known pyroptosis inhibitors, disulfiram and dimethyl fumarate. Collectively, these findings suggest that CA inhibits pyroptosis by targeting GSDMD and is a potential candidate for curbing the pyroptosis‐associated disease.
Background Treatment options for advanced colon cancer are mainly combinations of chemotherapy and targeted drugs. However, poor physical health and medication intolerance limit the choice of anticancer drugs. Colon cancer with cirrhosisis a particular patient group that poses a challenge to clinical treatment.
Case presentation This article presents a case of a patient in the decompensated stage of cirrhosis who was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer. The initial presentation was a nodule on his navel named the Sister Mary Joseph’s nodule, which was later confirmed by biopsy and PET-CT as one of the metastases of colon cancer. The patient was treated with Cetuximab and 5-Fluorouracil at a below-guideline dose, however, portal vein thrombosis developed and led to death. This entire process, from diagnosis to death, occurred within a span of three months.
Conclusion Cancers with cirrhosis are a special group that deserves more attention. There is no unified treatment guideline for these patients, especially those with extrahepatic primary tumors. We should be more cautious when choosing treatment for such patients in the future. Both chemotherapy and targeting may potentially induce portal vein thrombosis, which appears to have a higher incidence and worse prognosis than other diseases.
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