Literature DB >> 32176591

Taking a Full Snapshot of Cancer Biology: Deciphering the Tumor Microenvironment for Effective Cancer Therapy in the Oncology Clinic.

Kevin Dzobo1,2.   

Abstract

A bottleneck that is hindering therapeutics innovation in cancers is the current lack of integration of what we have learned in tumor biology as well as the tumor microenvironment (TME). This is because tumors are complex tissues composed of cancer cells, stromal cells, and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Although genetic alterations might cause the initial uncontrolled growth, resistance to apoptosis in cancer cells and stromal cells play additional key roles within the TME and thus influence tumor initiation, progression, therapy resistance, and metastasis. Therapies targeting cancer cells are usually insufficient when the stromal component of the TME causes therapy resistance. For innovation in cancer treatment and to take a full snapshot of cancer biology, anticancer drug design must, therefore, target both cancer cells and the stromal component. This expert review critically examines the TME components such as cancer-associated fibroblasts and ECM that can be reprogrammed to create a tumor-suppressive environment, thereby aiding in tumor treatment. Better cancer experimental models that mimic the TME such as tumor spheroids, microfluidics, three dimensional (3D) bioprinted models, and organoids will allow deeper investigations of the TME complexity and can lead to the translation of basic tumor biology to effective cancer treatments. Ultimately, innovative cancer treatments and, by extension, improvement in cancer patients' outcomes will emerge from combinatorial drug development strategies targeting both cancer cells and stromal components of the TME. Combinatorial treatment strategies can take the form of chemotherapy and radiotherapy (targeting tumor cells and stromal components) and immunotherapy that is able to regulate immune responses against tumor cells. This expert review thus addresses a previously neglected knowledge gap in cancer drug design and development by broadening the focus in cancer biology to TME so as to empower disruptive health care innovations in the oncology clinic.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biomarkers; cancer research; drug design and development; drug resistance; health care innovation; tumor microenvironment

Mesh:

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32176591     DOI: 10.1089/omi.2020.0019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  OMICS        ISSN: 1536-2310


  7 in total

Review 1.  Personalized models of heterogeneous 3D epithelial tumor microenvironments: Ovarian cancer as a model.

Authors:  Eric N Horst; Michael E Bregenzer; Pooja Mehta; Catherine S Snyder; Taylor Repetto; Yang Yang-Hartwich; Geeta Mehta
Journal:  Acta Biomater       Date:  2021-04-30       Impact factor: 10.633

2.  Identification of Immune-Related Genes Associated With Bladder Cancer Based on Immunological Characteristics and Their Correlation With the Prognosis.

Authors:  Zhen Kang; Wei Li; Yan-Hong Yu; Meng Che; Mao-Lin Yang; Jin-Jun Len; Yue-Rong Wu; Jun-Feng Yang
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-11-26       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Ferroptosis-related genes identify tumor immune microenvironment characterization for the prediction of prognosis in cervical cancer.

Authors:  Xiaocheng Yang; Fanxing Yin; Qingyang Liu; Yue Ma; Hao Zhang; Panpan Guo; Wen Wen; Xu Guo; Yihao Wu; Zhuo Yang; Yanshuo Han
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2022-01

4.  Spheroid Culture Differentially Affects Cancer Cell Sensitivity to Drugs in Melanoma and RCC Models.

Authors:  Aleksandra Filipiak-Duliban; Klaudia Brodaczewska; Arkadiusz Kajdasz; Claudine Kieda
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 5.923

Review 5.  Immunomodulatory Properties of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors-More than Boosting T-Cell Responses?

Authors:  Michael Kuske; Maximilian Haist; Thomas Jung; Stephan Grabbe; Matthias Bros
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 6.639

6.  Molecular subtypes of osteosarcoma classified by cancer stem cell related genes define immunological cell infiltration and patient survival.

Authors:  Lei Guo; Taiqiang Yan; Wei Guo; Jianfang Niu; Wei Wang; Tingting Ren; Yi Huang; Jiuhui Xu; Boyang Wang
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-08-19       Impact factor: 8.786

7.  Galectin-9/TIM-3 as a Key Regulator of Immune Response in Gliomas With Chromosome 1p/19q Codeletion.

Authors:  Guanzhang Li; Ruoyu Huang; Wenhua Fan; Di Wang; Fan Wu; Fan Zeng; Mingchen Yu; You Zhai; Yuanhao Chang; Changqing Pan; Tao Jiang; Wei Yan; Hongjun Wang; Wei Zhang
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-12-08       Impact factor: 7.561

  7 in total

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