Hidden epidemic: Metabolic disorders drive the next wave of liver cancer
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 24-May-2026 10:15 ET (24-May-2026 14:15 GMT/UTC)
A global review of liver cancer trends using GLOBOCAN 2022 and Global Burden of Disease data reveals a shift from viral hepatitis to metabolic disease as a leading cause. While incidence and mortality remain high, particularly in China, improved vaccination and treatment have reduced virus-related cases. Rising obesity and lifestyle risks now drive new cases. The study highlights prevention, early detection, and AI-driven care as critical strategies to curb future liver cancer burden worldwide.
Researchers have developed a stable, orally administrable "nanoreactor" using hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) that withstands the gastrointestinal environment to deliver protective enzymes. By targeting and degrading a specific aging-associated metabolite in the gut, this targeted therapy reduced neuroinflammation and alleviated cognitive decline in aged mice. This study offers a potential strategy for senescence intervention and the oral delivery of sensitive biologic drugs.
At present, only around 5% of patients with colon cancer are candidates for immunotherapy. This new biomarker could make it possible to determine more accurately which individuals may receive this treatment with a likelihood of success and expand the number of patients who could benefit from it. The study, led by the Hospital del Mar Research Institute and IRB Barcelona, shows that the determination of this protein, CTHRC1, can be used to assess patient prognosis. At the same time, it opens up new avenues to approach this type of tumour. The research team has demonstrated that this biomarker can be detected using routine diagnostic tests in the clinical practice of any Pathology service.
Researchers at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine have found that stopping mass drug administration for Lymphatic Filariasis (LF) was associated with an increase in infections from other parasitic worms, threatening disease control efforts.
The study, published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, suggests that once wider community treatment programmes for LF ended, school-aged children were nearly twice as likely to be infected with the intestinal roundworm Ascaris lumbricoides.
The USC research team that recently identified the hormone-encoding gene GDF15 as a key driver of pregnancy sickness has identified 9 additional genes linked to its most severe form, hyperemesis gravidarum (HG). Six of these genes had not been previously linked to the condition. Growing evidence shows HG has a strong biological and genetic basis and can lead to severe malnourishment, putting both mother and baby at risk. In the largest genetic study of HG to date, researchers from the Keck School of Medicine of USC and their international collaborators conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 10,974 women with the condition and 461,461 controls across European, Asian, African and Latino ancestries. The findings, just published in Nature Genetics, offer new clues about the condition and new hope for those affected. The researchers identified 10 genes linked to HG—four previously identified and six new. The strongest link by far was to growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15), a gene that produces a hormone of the same name, which rises sharply during pregnancy. The other genes identified relate to key pregnancy hormones, appetite and nausea, insulin and metabolism, how the brain learns and adapts, and certain pregnancy outcomes. The findings reveal new potential treatment targets and could possibly also help match existing medications to patients based on their genetic profiles. The research team also just received approval to launch a clinical trial of metformin, a widely used diabetes medicine that increases GDF15 levels. The study will test whether taking metformin before pregnancy can desensitize women to the hormone, potentially reducing nausea and vomiting or preventing HG in women who have had it before.
Kiora Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: KPRX) today announced the publication of the results from its Phase 1 ABACUS-1 study of KIO-301 in Nature Medicine. The publication adds clinical detail to a program aimed at restoring light responsiveness with a small molecule “photoswitch” in patients with the advanced inherited retinal disease, retinitis pigmentosa.
A recent study shows that assistance dogs do not only help people with practical tasks, but actively contribute to their care, based on mutual trust and continuous interpretation of each other.
An extensive register‑based study conducted in Finland has found an increase in severe mental health problems among some adolescents and young adults who have undergone medical gender reassignment (GR).