| Literature DB >> 31277510 |
Maria Giovanna Scioli1, Gabriele Storti2, Federico D'Amico1, Pietro Gentile2, Bong-Sung Kim3, Valerio Cervelli2, Augusto Orlandi4.
Abstract
Growing importance has been attributed to interactions between tumors, the stromal microenvironment and adult mesenchymal stem cells. Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) are routinely employed in regenerative medicine and in autologous fat transfer procedures. To date, clinical trials have failed to demonstrate the potential pro-oncogenic role of ASC enrichment. Nevertheless, some pre-clinical studies from in vitro and in vivo models have suggested that ASCs act as a potential tumor promoter for different cancer cell types, and support tumor progression and invasiveness through the activation of several intracellular signals. Interaction with the tumor microenvironment and extracellular matrix remodeling, the exosomal release of pro-oncogenic factors as well as the induction of epithelial-mesenchymal transitions are the most investigated mechanisms. Moreover, ASCs have also demonstrated an elective tumor homing capacity and this tumor-targeting capacity makes them a suitable carrier for anti-cancer drug delivery. New genetic and applied nanotechnologies may help to design promising anti-cancer cell-based approaches through the release of loaded intracellular nanoparticles. These new anti-cancer therapies can more effectively target tumor cells, reaching higher local concentrations even in pharmacological sanctuaries, and thus minimizing systemic adverse drug effects. The potential interplay between ASCs and tumors and potential ASCs-based therapeutic approaches are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: ASC-based drug delivery; adipose-derived stem cells; cancer progression; metastasis; microenvironment; oncological safety
Year: 2019 PMID: 31277510 PMCID: PMC6651808 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20133296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A schematic representation of new anti-cancer strategies based on adipose-derived stem cell delivery systems.
New anti-cancer therapeutic strategies based on ASC delivery systems.
| Category | Type | Mechanism of Action | Target | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drug loading | PTX | anti-mitotic activity | human leukaemia MOLT-4 cells | [ |
| Drug-loaded NPs | PTX | anti-mitotic activity + high frequency magnetic field | murine brain astrocytoma ALTS1C1 | [ |
| Gene delivery by viral vectors | TRAIL overexpression | suicide inductor | primary patient-derived glioblastoma | [ |
| TNF-α overexpression | apoptotic activity | human breast cancer SKBR3 cells | [ | |
| IP-10 overexpression | antitumor activity | murine metastatic melanoma | [ | |
| cytosine deaminase | cytotoxicity to 5-fluorouracil | human colon cancer HT-29 cells | [ | |
| thymidine kinase | cytotoxicity to ganciclovir | human glioblastoma cells 8-MG-BA, 42-MG-BA and U-118 MG | [ | |
| modified E6/E7 antigen | immunomodulatory activity | murine lung carcinoma LLC1 cells | [ | |
| Gene delivery by non-viral vectors | BMP4 plasmid-loaded NPs | antitumor activity | primary patient-derived glioma | [ |
| TRAIL plasmid-loaded NPs | suicide inductor | primary patient-derived glioblastoma | [ | |
| Micro-RNA transfection | miR-124 e miR-145 | reducing cell migration and self-renewal | primary patient-derived glioma and glioma stem cells | [ |
| miR-122 | apoptotic activity | human hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 cells | [ | |
| miR-150 | immunomodulatory activity | human pancreatic cancer cells PANC1 | [ |
Abbreviations: LR, local recurrence; DM, distant metastasis; HT, hormonal therapy.
Clinical studies on oncological safety using fat grafting.
| Clinical study | Year | Design of the Study | Control | N° Patients | Median Follow-Up (Months) | Results with fat Grafting | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osteosarcoma and soft tissue sarcomas | 2015 | Retrospective case series | no | 17 | 32.5 | LR and DM not reported | [ |
| 2018 | Retrospective case series | no | 60 | 28.6 | not increased recurrence risk (LR and DM) | [ | |
| Radiotherapy induced xerosthomia | 2018 | Randomized placebo controlled phase I/II | yes | 30 | 4 | LR and DM not reported | [ |
| Pulmonary metastasis | 2017 | Prospective cohort study | yes | 40 | 61 | LR and DM not reported | [ |
| Breast cancer | 2010 | Retrospective cohort | no | 137 | 91 | not increased LR, DM not reported | [ |
| 2012 | Retrospective matched cohort | yes | 321 | 26 | not increased recurrence risk, higher risk of LR for in-situ cancer subgroup | [ | |
| 2012 | Prospective single-arm trial | no | 67 | 12 | no LR, DM not reported | [ | |
| 2013 | Retrospective matched cohort | yes | 59 | 42 | increased LR for in-situ cancer patients, DM not reported | [ | |
| 2015 | Retrospective matched cohort | yes | 211 | 32 | not increased recurrence risk (LR and DM) | [ | |
| 2016 | Retrospective matched cohort | yes | 719 | 60 | not increased recurrence risk, higher risk of LR for HT subgroup | [ | |
| 2017 | Retrospective case-control | yes | 225 | / | cases are cancer recurrence (2006-2011), not increased recurrence risk | [ | |
| 2017 | Retrospective cohort | yes | 248 | 45.6 | not increased recurrence risk (LR and DM) | [ | |
| 2017 | Retrospective matched cohort | yes | 100 | 31 | increased LR for positive nodal status and high-grade neoplasia, DM not reported, similar disease-free survival and overall recurrence | [ |
Abbreviations: NPs, nanoparticles.