“…Although elevated proinflammatory cytokine levels account for about half of cancer patients with altered circadian function, other mechanisms are most likely involved, including drug-induced CTS disruption, blunted synchronizers from disrupted feeding routine, minimal and untimely light exposure, or circadian alterations mediated by other brain areas. Hence, systems medicine approaches encompassing all factors toward CTS strengthening would not limit their usefulness to cancer, but could be applied to other chronic conditions, such as joint (Berenbaum and Meng, 2016), renal (Koch et al, 2009), liver (Tahara and Shibata, 2016), cardiovascular (Portaluppi et al, 2012; Smolensky et al, 2015c), metabolic (Asher and Schibler, 2011; Bass, 2012), neurologic (Smolensky et al, 2015b; Videnovic and Zee, 2015), and psychiatric (Wulff et al, 2010; McClung, 2013) diseases. Indeed, altered circadian function has been described in several diseases of the aforementioned systems, and their function has been shown to be affected by circadian disruption in otherwise healthy subjects (Reddy and O'Neill, 2010; Roenneberg and Merrow, 2016).…”