In continuation of my update on metformin and phenformin 
In a new study in the journal Cancer Cell, Shaw and a team of scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies found that phenformin, a derivative of the widely-used diabetes drug metformin, decreased the size of lung tumors in mice and increased the animals' survival. The findings may give hope to the nearly 30 percent of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors lack LKB1 (also called STK11).
In a new study in the journal Cancer Cell, Shaw and a team of scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies found that phenformin, a derivative of the widely-used diabetes drug metformin, decreased the size of lung tumors in mice and increased the animals' survival. The findings may give hope to the nearly 30 percent of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors lack LKB1 (also called STK11).
  The LKB1 gene turns on a metabolic enzyme called AMPK when energy  levels of ATP, molecules that store the energy we need for just about  everything we do, run low in cells. In a previous study, Shaw, an  associate professor in Salk's Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory and  researcher in the Institute's new Helmsley Center for Genomic Medicine,  demonstrated that cells lacking a normal copy of the LKB1 gene fail to  activate AMPK in response to low energy levels. LKB1-dependent  activation of AMPK serves as a low-energy checkpoint in the cell. Cells  that lack LKB1 are unable to sense such metabolic stress and initiate  the process to restore their ATP levels following a metabolic change. As  a result, these LKB1-mutant cells run out of cellular energy and  undergo apoptosis, or programmed cell death, whereas cells with intact  LKB1 are alerted to the crisis and re-correct their metabolism.
  "The driving idea behind the research is knowing that AMPK serves as a  sensor for low energy loss in cells and that LKB1-deficient cells lack  the ability to activate AMPK and sense energy loss," says David  Shackelford, a postdoctoral researcher at Salk who spearheaded the study  in Shaw's lab and is now an assistant professor at UCLA's David Geffen  School of Medicine.
  That led Shaw and his team to a class of drugs called biguanides, which  lower cellular energy levels by attacking the power stations of the  cell, called mitochondria. Metformin and phenformin both inhibit  mitochondria; however, phenformin is nearly 50 times as potent as  metformin. In the study, the researchers tested phenformin as a chemotherapy  agent in genetically-engineered mice lacking LKB1 and which had  advanced stage lung tumors. After three weeks of treatment, Shaw and his  team saw a modest reduction in tumor burden in the mice.
Ref : https://www.cell.com/cancer-cell/abstract/S1535-6108%2812%2900518-1
Ref : https://www.cell.com/cancer-cell/abstract/S1535-6108%2812%2900518-1
