Literature DB >> 16929175

Systemic cancer progression and tumor dormancy: mathematical models meet single cell genomics.

Christoph A Klein1, Dieter Hölzel.   

Abstract

Metastatic progression is thought to result from genetically advanced "fully-malignant" tumor cells. Within the concept the prevailing view holds that such cells disseminate mostly from large tumors and are capable of growing into metastases once they arrive at a distant site. Support for this scenario comes from numerous mouse models in which transplanted tumor cells grow into metastases within days or weeks. However, the assumption of such fully-malignant disseminating cells in human cancer is misleading and is neither supported by mathematical modeling of survival data from cancer patients nor by ex-vivo genomic data from disseminated cancer cells. For example, in breast cancer the growth of metastases is highly homogeneous and takes on average six years, the number of disseminated tumor cells before diagnosis of metastasis is similar for different tumor stages, and the genomic aberrations of disseminated cancer cells do rarely correspond to those in the primary tumor. Since these facts question conventional concepts of metastatic progression we provide a model of cancer progression in which time considerations and direct ex-vivo data form a starting point. In the proposed model tumor dormancy is a characteristic of almost all migrated tumor cells and metastatic growth is a rare, stochastic, evolutionary process of selection and mutation of cells that often disseminate shortly after transformation at the primary site.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16929175     DOI: 10.4161/cc.5.16.3097

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Cycle        ISSN: 1551-4005            Impact factor:   4.534


  36 in total

Review 1.  The connectivity of lymphogenous and hematogenous tumor cell dissemination: biological insights and clinical implications.

Authors:  Jonathan P Sleeman; Blake Cady; Klaus Pantel
Journal:  Clin Exp Metastasis       Date:  2012-06-06       Impact factor: 5.150

Review 2.  Dormancy of metastatic melanoma.

Authors:  Liliana Ossowski; Julio A Aguirre-Ghiso
Journal:  Pigment Cell Melanoma Res       Date:  2009-10-19       Impact factor: 4.693

3.  Computational modeling of pancreatic cancer reveals kinetics of metastasis suggesting optimum treatment strategies.

Authors:  Hiroshi Haeno; Mithat Gonen; Meghan B Davis; Joseph M Herman; Christine A Iacobuzio-Donahue; Franziska Michor
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2012-01-20       Impact factor: 41.582

4.  Modeling boundary conditions for balanced proliferation in metastatic latency.

Authors:  Donald P Taylor; Jakob Z Wells; Andrej Savol; Chakra Chennubhotla; Alan Wells
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 12.531

5.  Biological resonance for cancer metastasis, a new hypothesis based on comparisons between primary cancers and metastases.

Authors:  Dongwei Gao; Sha Li
Journal:  Cancer Microenviron       Date:  2013-11-10

6.  Selection and adaptation during metastatic cancer progression.

Authors:  Christoph A Klein
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-09-19       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Disseminated tumor cells in prostate cancer patients after radical prostatectomy and without evidence of disease predicts biochemical recurrence.

Authors:  Todd M Morgan; Paul H Lange; Michael P Porter; Daniel W Lin; William J Ellis; Ian S Gallaher; Robert L Vessella
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2009-01-15       Impact factor: 12.531

Review 8.  Plasticity of tumour and immune cells: a source of heterogeneity and a cause for therapy resistance?

Authors:  Michael Hölzel; Anton Bovier; Thomas Tüting
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2013-03-28       Impact factor: 60.716

Review 9.  Models, mechanisms and clinical evidence for cancer dormancy.

Authors:  Julio A Aguirre-Ghiso
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 60.716

Review 10.  Tumor heterogeneity: causes and consequences.

Authors:  Andriy Marusyk; Kornelia Polyak
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2009-11-18
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