| Literature DB >> 35455987 |
Gabriel M Pagnotti1, Trupti Trivedi1, Khalid S Mohammad2.
Abstract
Metastatic bone disease is a common and devastating complication to cancer, confounding treatments and recovery efforts and presenting a significant barrier to de-escalating the adverse outcomes associated with disease progression. Despite significant advances in the field, bone metastases remain presently incurable and contribute heavily to cancer-associated morbidity and mortality. Mechanisms associated with metastatic bone disease perpetuation and paralleled disruption of bone remodeling are highlighted to convey how they provide the foundation for therapeutic targets to stem disease escalation. The focus of this review aims to describe the preclinical modeling and diagnostic evaluation of metastatic bone disease as well as discuss the range of therapeutic modalities used clinically and how they may impact skeletal tissue.Entities:
Keywords: bone marrow microenvironment; immunotherapy; metastatic bone disease; osteoblastic lesions; osteolytic lesions; palliative therapy; radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35455987 PMCID: PMC9030480 DOI: 10.3390/cells11081309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Metastatic bone disease and the various treatment strategies employed to combat tumor progression corrupt the bone remodeling pathway. Incidence and lesion type vary depending on the phenotype of the primary malignancy and can even vary amongst subtypes within bone metastases. Treatments can directly target bone matrix (irradiation) or indirectly (hormone deprivation, chemotherapy) by interrupting pathways critical to maintaining normal bone remodeling and healthy musculoskeletal tissue. Systems modeling metastatic bone disease can be achieved by introducing murine and human cell lines intravenously, left ventricular intracardiac inoculation, intraosseous injection into tibiae or femora, orthotopically or using spontaneous models (predominantly canine). Cancer treatment-derived bone loss can be simulated by modeling hormone deprivation protocols, introduction of pharmacologic agents and under skeletal irradiation. Detection of bone pathology in the laboratory is performed using a variety of histological techniques to identify and quantify tumor burden, the activity and number of bone remodeling cells and the amount of substrate they are acting on and the areal and spatial quantification of bone mineral content. Longitudinal in vivo and typically higher-resolution ex vivo imaging techniques range in resolution, speed and the detection of metastatic tumor progression and treatment response, modalities which are also limited by the animal’s tolerance of a multiple round of anesthesia and the severity of the disease progression.
Figure 2Therapeutic approaches to treat metastatic disease are varied, eliciting anti-tumor properties although not without secondary effects to the surrounding musculoskeletal tissues. (A) Surgical removal of diseased tissue typically includes amputation, heightening skeletal morbidity. Pharmacological blockade or surgical removal of tissues that produce sex steroids to limit tumor progression can act negatively on musculoskeletal tissue, as estrogens and testosterones are major regulators of physiological bone remodeling. (B) Chemotherapeutic drugs, particularly in combination with bone-targeted agents (C) are employed in combination and in varying time schemas to attack tumor in bone while suppressing heightened resorption with anti-resorptive drugs. (D) TGF-β pathway inhibitors have been tested for their efficacy in reducing tumor burden in preclinical animal models and clinical trials. Small molecules with radioactive properties, such as radium-223, exhibit dual targeting properties to reduce tumor burden and improve bone health in metastatic bone diseases. (E) Many radiation therapies are a means of targeting difficult to reach tumors and as a palliative care approach; however, damage to nearby bone tissue and the underlying stem cell pool can increase fracture risk for patients treated following high-dose radiation. (F) The burgeoning field of immunotherapies utilize CAR-T and other antigen-presenting schemas to activate lymphocytes to target tumor cells, while (G) senolytic compounds are being explored as a means to induce tumor cell senescence. Patients with metastatic bone disease exhibit a high degree of bone pain; therefore, palliation casts a wide net, with (H) interventions ranging from tumor ablation to pharmacological suppression of pain receptors. (Note: Red arrows indicate adverse effect on bone).