Stress Turns Body Into 'Super Highway' Helping Cancer Spread, Study Suggests

Researchers claim stress helps cancer spread 'six times faster' than normal.

Stress helps speed up the spread of cancer around the body, startling new research suggests.

Australian scientists said stress caused cancer cells to spread six times faster in mice. They believe stress transforms the lymphatic system into a "super highway" which then carries cancer cells rapidly around the body.

Medication used for heart problems might hold the key to preventing the spread, they said.

As a result, researchers are conducting trials of the drug Propranolol to see how successful it is at reducing stress-induced cancer spread in human patients.

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Stress can make cancer spread six times faster, according to researchers.

Researchers at Monash University studied how stress drives breast cancer metastasis in mice, this is where cancer spreads from the original tumour to other areas of the body.

The research team placed mice with cancer in confined spaces to mimic the physiological and emotional effects of stressed humans.

They found that stress sent a signal into the cancer that allowed tumour cells to escape and spread. 

"The stress is sort of acting like a fertiliser and helping the tumour cell take hold and colonise those other organs," cancer biologist Dr Erica Sloan told ABC News.

She explained that stress transformed the lymphatic system, which cancer is known to spread through, into a "super highway" - allowing it to spread at a faster speed.

Co-author Dr Caroline Le said: "You see six times more spread of cancer in stressed mice compared to control mice."

The researchers added that chronic stress can be extremely detrimental to cancer patients, particularly as it may prevent treatment from working properly.

"These findings...suggest that blocking the effects of stress to prevent cancer spread through lymphatic routes may provide a way to improve outcomes for patients with cancer," they wrote on the Monash University website.

Dr Sloan and Dr Le said medication for heart problems, which contain beta blockers, could be the key to preventing stress from increasing cancer's spread. 

This is because beta blockers compete with adrenalin to limit heart rate and blood pressure increase.

Dr Sloan is now testing a drug called Propranolol on cancer patients to see if it helps tackle the problem.

10 Symptoms That Could Mean Cancer
Persistent Cough Or Hoarseness (01 of10)
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This could indicate lung cancer. (credit:bert_phantana via Getty Images)
A Change In The Appearance Of A Mole (02 of10)
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This could mean you're suffering skin cancer. (credit:BananaStock via Getty Images)
A Persistent Change In Bowel Habits(03 of10)
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This could be a sign of bowel cancer. (credit:Doug Chinnery via Getty Images)
A Sore That Does Not Heal (04 of10)
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Depends on where, but a mouth ulcer could mean mouth cancer. (credit:Ilya Andriyanov via Getty Images)
Persistent Difficulty Swallowing(05 of10)
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This can mean a person is suffering oesophageal cancer. (credit:Jevtic via Getty Images)
Unexplained Weight Loss(06 of10)
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This can indicate several types of cancer. (credit:Fuse via Getty Images)
Persistent Change In Bladder Habits (07 of10)
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This could be a sign of bladder cancer and prostate cancer in men. (credit:kostsov via Getty Images)
An Unexplained Lump(08 of10)
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This can be a warning sign of many forms of the disease. (credit:Huseyin Tuncer via Getty Images)
Persistent Unexplained Pain(09 of10)
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Depending on where, this can denote many types of cancer. (credit:GoodLifeStudio via Getty Images)
Unexplained Bleeding.(10 of10)
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Depends where but this can mean bowel, cervical or vulval cancer. (credit:Maciej Frolow via Getty Images)

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