Cancer remains a leading cause of death in the world today. Despite decades of research to identify novel therapeutic approaches, durable regressions remain rare in patients with advanced disease, and survival benefits from new therapies are often negligible. Early diagnosis and treatment, rather than successful therapeutic intervention late in the disease process, are mostly responsible for the decreased mortality observed in some types of cancer (WHO).

The war against cancer has been heavily influenced by the principle of Paul Ehrlich's 'magic bullet', an idea originally introduced more than 100 years ago, and validated by the discovery of antibiotics 50 years later. Clinical cancer therapy implicitly assumes that similar magic bullets for cancer can be found with sufficient diligence. However, all attempts to find new drugs that selectively target and kill tumor cells have not been successful [1] and today we are still waiting for the magic bullet directed against most malignant tumors. As a result, alternative therapeutic approaches aimed at controlling rather than curing this disease are increasingly advocated [2].

In the past decade cancer imaging with FdG PET has become commonplace demonstrating that more than 90% of clinical cancers of sufficient size to be imaged take up glucose several fold more than adjacent normal tissue. Remarkably, although this appears to be the single most common property of the "tumor phenotype" the causes and consequences of glycolysis have rarely been considered as a therapeutic target. We propose that a new approach towards the war against cancer can be found in re-considering the critical differences in the metabolism of a tumor cell as compared to a normal one. More than 80 years ago the Nobel Prize winner Otto Heinrich Warburg discovered that tumors use glycolytic metabolism even in the presence of normal oxygen tension, an apparent paradox, since glycolysis is 18-fold less efficient than oxidative phosphorylation in producing energy (ATP). He also found that cancer cells were, unlike normal cells, able to live in the acidic environment that developed as a consequence of elevated lactic acid production by glycolysis. Today, we know that the metabolic changes occurring during cancer progression are mediated by two major pathways, i.e. the activity of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) and oncogene activation [3, 4]. The selective ability of tumor cells to adapt their metabolism to a hostile microenvironment is revealing new therapeutic targets to selectively eliminate cancer cells [5, 6].

We propose that the development of new anti-cancer therapies should include a focus on understanding both abnormal glucose metabolism and mechanisms used by cancer cells to survive and proliferate in the hostile microenvironment. In the latter, a dominant role is played by protons accumulating at the tumor site as a result of highly proliferating cancer cells relying on glycolysis with high lactic acid production and limited removal due to poor perfusion. To avoid acidification of intracellular pH, glycolytically-produced acid must be extruded by tumor cells through a number of proton transporters, such as V-ATPase [7], the Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) [8], the carbonic anhydrases [9], the proton linked monocarboxylate transporter MCTs [4], the Cl-/HCO3- exchangers and ATP synthase [10]. The increased activity of these transporters cause reversal of the normal intra-extracellular pH gradients, so that cancer cells produce significant acidification of the extracellular microenvironment, while they maintain a normal or slightly alkaline pH.

In contrast to cancer cells, the acidic extracellular space reduces viability and function of most normal cells including cytotoxic T cells that ordinarily mediate the immune response to tumor antigens. As a result, the tumor site becomes a relative sanctuary in which immune cells and other host cellular components are significantly inhibited. Interestingly, the acidic pH of tumor microenvironment also appears to favor the recruitment of immunosuppressive cells, such as myeloid-derived suppressor cells, further promoting escape from immune surveillance, neo-angiogenesis and stromal remodeling [11]. In addition, there is evidence that an acidic extracellular pH promotes invasiveness and metastatic behavior in several tumor models [12, 13], through a number of mechanisms such as increased traffic of acidic vesicles [14] and increased release of exosomes [15], whose pro-tumorigenic features are clearly emerging [16, 17], lytic enzyme activation and matrix destruction [12, 18] as well as aberrant phagocytic activity [19].

Clearly, these complex interactions of tumor and microenvironment represent a dynamic non-linear system and, as a result, a number of multidisciplinary groups at the interface between scientific fields, i.e. physics, mathematics and biology, are attempting to provide a unified frame to address these changes theoretically and experimentally [2022]. Understanding the interactions of the physical microenvironment and cellular properties will be required to exploit the tumor metabolism as a therapeutic strategy.

One emerging theme from this work is that the detoxification mechanisms that allow cancer cells to survive in extremely hostile conditions represent very appealing therapeutic targets. Thus, inhibition of membrane-bound carbonic anhydrases, proton pumps and transporters, which appear to be major pathways used by tumor cells to export protons [2330], may represent a novel and promising target for exerting a pleiotropic, multifaceted suppression of cancer cell growth and progression. Several lines of evidence suggest that the majority of human cancers may potentially be responsive to therapies based on inhibition of mechanisms underlying tumor acidification [2527].

Indeed, recent research has supported the idea that inhibiting tumor proton pumps and transporters may deprive cancer cells of a key mechanism of detoxification [7, 22, 23]. During the last decade, this H+- related approach mainly focused on the dynamics of protons in cancer has integrated many basic and clinical aspects, as well as several areas of cancer research and treatment, under a unified perspective and paradigm in modern translational oncology [31]. However, to date proton pump inhibition as an antitumor strategy has remained neglected in the clinic, despite mounting evidence of its potential use as an inexpensive and relatively non-toxic treatment. For example, a class of proton pump inhibitors currently used to treat peptic ulcers has now entered clinical trials for treatment of patients affected by melanoma and osteosarcoma with the endpoints of evaluating the chemosensitization effect of pre-treatment with high dosages of esomeprazole.

Several research groups scattered all over the world have recently started to investigate various aspects of proton dynamics in cancer cells, with quite encouraging preliminary results. With the intent of unifying investigators involved in this line of research the First International Symposium entitled "Proton transport and its inhibition (PTI) in the etiopathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of cancer" was held in Madrid, Spain, in April 2009. At this meeting we explored the main aspects of proton dynamics and the potential involvement in cancer etiology, etiopathogenesis and treatment. The main goals of this International Symposium were: a) To lead towards a unified and integrated understanding of the main role of H+ dynamics in modern cancer research; b) To discuss the more recent scientific data of intra and extracellular pH abnormalities in the onset of cancer as well as in its local and metastatic progression, focusing mainly on the molecular mechanisms driving the alterations of pH in various tumor types and tissues; c) To shed light on new potential targets for inducing selective apoptosis and other therapeutic interventions in malignant tumors and leukemias resistant to traditional treatments.

Both basic researchers and clinical oncologists participating at this meeting thought it was time to create a Society to attract the attention of lay people and the rest of the scientific community with respect to the emerging importance of acidity and proton dynamics in cancer pathogenesis and treatment. An intensive crosstalk between meeting attendees led to the formation of the "International Society for Proton Dynamics in Cancer" (ISPDC) in January 2010. This society is composed of researchers from all over the world who share the conviction that targeting tumor acidic pH could represent a significant advance in the treatment of most solid malignant tumors. Decreasing proton production, blocking proton extrusion, or increasing extracellular pH could result in a selective strategy to increase tumor cell death and/or to reduce proliferation and invasion.

The newly formed "International Society for Proton Dynamics in Cancer", focusing on the aspects of pH and/or dynamics of protons in cancer, will meet again during its First International Meeting in Rome on September 27th-28th 2010 http://ispdc.net. Both basic researchers and clinical oncologists are called upon to participate in this meeting where we hope to create an ideal environment to discuss several aspects of these new therapeutic approaches and develop implementation plans. The aim of the meeting is to foster translational research and stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration for developing new treatment targets and more specific and less toxic therapeutic strategies based on the most recent knowledge on proton dynamics in tumor cell biology.