| Literature DB >> 33193295 |
Antonella Sistigu1,2, Martina Musella1, Claudia Galassi1, Ilio Vitale3,4, Ruggero De Maria1,5.
Abstract
Cancer cell dormancy is a common feature of human tumors and represents a major clinical barrier to the long-term efficacy of anticancer therapies. Dormant cancer cells, either in primary tumors or disseminated in secondary organs, may reawaken and relapse into a more aggressive disease. The mechanisms underpinning dormancy entry and exit strongly resemble those governing cancer cell stemness and include intrinsic and contextual cues. Cellular and molecular components of the tumor microenvironment persistently interact with cancer cells. This dialog is highly dynamic, as it evolves over time and space, strongly cooperates with intrinsic cell nets, and governs cancer cell features (like quiescence and stemness) and fate (survival and outgrowth). Therefore, there is a need for deeper insight into the biology of dormant cancer (stem) cells and the mechanisms regulating the equilibrium quiescence-versus-proliferation are vital in our pursuit of new therapeutic opportunities to prevent cancer from recurring. Here, we review and discuss microenvironmental regulations of cancer dormancy and its parallels with cancer stemness, and offer insights into the therapeutic strategies adopted to prevent a lethal recurrence, by either eradicating resident dormant cancer (stem) cells or maintaining them in a dormant state.Entities:
Keywords: cancer stem cells (CSC); disseminated cancer cells (DCC); dormancy; immune escape; immunoediting of cancer; reawakening; tumor evolution; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193295 PMCID: PMC7609361 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.02166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Principles and temporal course of cancer dormancy. Along with primary tumor development, a state of dormancy (red line) allows the survival of microscopic bulk cancer cells. The progressive evolution of the tumor, accumulating genetic and epigenetic changes, and its microenvironment, molding immune, and angiogenic contextures, eventually lead to tumor outgrowth (blue line). At this time, early disseminated cancer cells may develop and home to metastatic sites (mainly bone marrow, lungs, lymph nodes, and brain). Following treatment (either surgery or therapy or both) leading to tumor regression, resistant cells may persist latent (red line) and constitute an undetectable minimal residual disease. At this time, late disseminated cancer cells may develop and join early counterparts at secondary organs. After a time lag, which can last from a few months to many years, these disseminated cells may overgrow and give rise to metastatic clinical relapse (blue line). Dormancy might be due to solitary cells entered into a G0 phase of cell cycle arrest (cancer cell dormancy) or to the equilibrium between the rate of proliferation and apoptosis (tumor mass dormancy) mainly influenced by angiogenic and immunological cues.
Models for studying cancer dormancy.
| Cancer cells are cultivated on extracellular matrix (ECM) component-coated plates. | ( |
| Dormant cancer cells remain quiescent in 3D bioengineered models. | |
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| Breast Cancer + Basement Membrane Matrix | ( |
| Breast Cancer + Hepatic Niche Cells + PEG hydrogel | ( |
| Breast Cancer + Bone Niche Cells | ( |
| BCL1 mouse lymphoma modelDA1-3b of acute myeloid leukemia | ( |
| Cancer cells are injected directly into the circulation (e.g., tail vein, left cardiac ventricle, iliac artery) | ( |
| Cancer cells are injected orthotopically or subcutaneously. | ( |
| Genetically engineered mouse models of oncogene ablation/induction (e.g., | ( |
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Figure 2Microenvironmental patterns tuning cancer dormancy, reawakening, and stemness. A schematic model showing the plethora of microenvironmental cues, encompassing the cellular, molecular, and physical factors, that converge to induce either stress-related or mitogenic signals to cancer cells. The bulk of cancer cells, encompassing disseminated and stem cells, in the face of contextual signals, either enter or exit dormancy.
Clinical trials targeting the dormancy window in cancer patients.
| Pilot study to evaluate the impact of Denosumab on DTCs in patients with early stage breast cancer | NCT01545648 | Denosumab | 4 | Terminated (low accrual) | 2 | N/A |
| Pilot study of mobilization and treatment of DTCs in men with metastatic prostate cancer | NCT02478125 | Burixafor hydrobromide, G-CSF, Docetaxel, or in combination | 3 | Terminated (low accrual) | 1 | N/A |
| Effect of Trastuzumab on DFS in early stage HER2-negative breast cancer patients with ERBB2 expressing DTCs | NCT01779050 | Trastuzumab | 7 | Active, not recruiting | 2 | All patients experienced eradication of HER2/neu-positive ITCs from bone marrow; reduction in the number of ITC-positive patients |
| Zoledronic acid in the treatment of breast cancer with minimal residual disease in the bone marrow (MRD-1) | NCT00172068 | Zoledronic acid in combination with calcium/vitamin D | 96 | Terminated | 2 | All patients treated became DTC negative; untreated patients 12 months after diagnosis had significantly shorter OS |
| Secondary adjuvant treatment for patients with ITCs in bone marrow | NCT00248703 | Docetaxel | 1,028 | Active, not recruiting | 2 | 79% of patients became DTC negative; enhanced metastasis-free survival in patients with DTC elimination |
| Gedatolisib, Hydroxychloroquine or the combination for prevention of recurrent breast cancer (GLACIER) | NCT03400254 | Hydroxychloroquine, Gedatolisib, or combination | 0 | Withdrawn | 3 | N/A |
| Phase II pilot trial of Hydroxychloroquine, EVErolimus or the combination for prevention of recurrent breast cancer (CLEVER) | NCT03032406 | Hydroxycholorquine, everolimus, or combination | 60 | Recruiting | 2 | N/A |
| Prolonged Tamoxifen compared with shorter Tamoxifen in treating patients who have breast cancer | NCT00003016 | Tamoxifen citrate | 20,000 | Terminated | N/A | N/A |
| Pilot study of 5-Azacitidine and All-trans retinoic acid for prostate cancer with PSA-only recurrence after local treatment | NCT03572387 | Combination of 5-Azacitidine and All-trans retinoic acid, or no treatment | 20 | Recruiting | 2 | N/A |
| Phase II study comparing chemotherapy in combination with OGX-427 or placebo in patients with bladder cancer | NCT01454089 | Gemcitabine and Cisplatin in combination with OGX-427 | 183 | Completed | 2 | N/A |
| OGX-427 in castration resistant prostate cancer patients | NCT01120470 | OGX-427 and prednisone in combination | 74 | Completed | 2 | N/A |
| Safety and efficacy of ABT-510 in subjects with advanced renal cell carcinoma | NCT00073125 | ABT-510/Thrombospondin-1 mimetic | 103 | Completed | 2 | N/A |
| PROvenge treatment and early cancer treatment | NCT00779402 | Sipuleucel-T | 176 | Completed | 3 | N/A |
| Sunitinib malate or Sorafenib tosylate in treating patients with kidney cancer that was removed by surgery | NCT00326898 | Sunitinib malate or sorafenib tosylate | 1,943 | Completed | 3 | None of patients treated showed survival benefit relative to placebo |
DC, dendritic cell; DFS, disease free survival; DTC, disseminating tumor cell; ITC, isolating tumor cell; N/A, not applicable; OS, overall survival.