| Literature DB >> 35048009 |
Abdelhakim Salem1,2, Tuula Salo1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a group of common cancers characterized by a swift growth pattern, early metastasis, and dismal 5-year survival rates. Despite the recent advances in cancer management, the multimodality approach is not effective in eradicating HNSCC. Moreover, the clinical response to the antiangiogenic therapy remains considerably limited in HNSCC patients, suggesting that tumor perfusion can take place through other non-angiogenic pathways. Tumor cell-induced angiogenesis is one of the main hallmarks of cancer. However, at the end of the previous millennium, a new paradigm of tumor cell-associated neovascularization has been reported in human melanoma cells. This new phenomenon, which was named "vasculogenic mimicry" or "vascular mimicry" (VM), describes the ability of aggressively growing tumor cells to form perfusable, matrix-rich, vessel-like networks in 3-dimensional matrices in vitro. Similar matrix-rich VM networks were also identified in tissue samples obtained from cancer patients. To date, myriad studies have reported intriguing features of VM in a wide variety of cancers including HNSCC. We aim in this mini-review to summarize the current evidence regarding the phenomenon of VM in HNSCC-from the available detection protocols and potentially involved mechanisms, to its prognostic value and the present limitations.Entities:
Keywords: epithelial-mesenchymal transition; head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; hypoxia; lymphatic mimicry; prognosis; survival; tumor cell-lined vessels; vasculogenic mimicry
Year: 2021 PMID: 35048009 PMCID: PMC8757801 DOI: 10.3389/froh.2021.666895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oral Health ISSN: 2673-4842
Figure 1Schematic illustration of angiogenesis and vasculogenic mimicry (VM) in the tumorigenesis of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. (A) In induced angiogenesis, tumor cells release potent pro-angiogenic factors that induce the growth of inter- and intratumoral vasculature to enrich the tumor microenvironment. (B) In the VM, the aggressively invading tumors can generate de novo, perfusable, and matrix-rich vessel-like channels as an alternative non-angiogenic neovascularization method. (C) These new tumor cell-lined channels may also express a considerable levels of endothelial cell markers (magenta color; mosaic pattern); VM channels may reach out to the host vasculature and increase nutrient retrieval to nourish the hypoxic tumor tissue. Ultimately, these VM channels could be utilized as a dissemination route to facilitate distant metastasis.
List of studies that investigated the prognostic significance of VM in HNSCC patients.
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| Taiwan | OSCC | Tongue, cheek, gingiva, floor of mouth, palate, lip | 112 | 41 | Patients with more VM had poorer survival | [ |
| China | OSCC | Tongue, gingiva, palate, tonsil | 190 | 60 | VM predicted shorter survival | [ |
| China | LSCC | Larynx | 203 | 44 | VM predicted poor clinical parameters and shorter survival | [ |
| China | LSCC | Larynx | 168 | 37 | VM was shown as an independent prognostic factor for diseases-free survival | [ |
| China | NPC | Nasopharynx | 40 | 23 | VM predicted shorter survival | [ |
HNSCC, Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; OSCC, oral squamous cell carcinoma; LSCC, laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma; NPC, nasopharyngeal carcinoma; VM, vasculogenic mimicry.