| Literature DB >> 36173644 |
Shan Jiang1, Johan Bourghardt Fagman1,2, Yunyun Ma1, Jian Liu1,3, Caroline Vihav1,2, Cecilia Engstrom1,2, Beidong Liu4, Changyan Chen1.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer is a devastating and lethal human malignancy with no curable chemo-treatments available thus far. More than 90% of pancreatic tumors are formed from ductal epithelium as pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), which often accompany with the expression of mutant K-ras. The incidences of pancreatic cancer are expected to increase rapidly worldwide in the near future, due to environmental pollution, obesity epidemics and etc. The dismal prognosis of this malignancy is contributed to its susceptibility to tumor micro-metastasis from inception and the lack of methods to detect precursor lesions at very early stages of the onset until clinical symptoms occur. In recent years, basic and clinical studies have been making promising progresses for discovering markers to determine the subtypes or stages of this malignancy, which allow effectively implementing personalized therapeutic interventions. The purpose of this review is to discuss the existing knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of pancreatic cancer and the current state of treatment options with the emphasis on targeting therapeutic approaches. The specific focuses are on the molecular mechanisms of the disease, identifications of drug resistance, establishment of immune escaping mechanisms as well as potential of targeting identified pathways in combinations with existing chemo-drugs.Entities:
Keywords: etiology; genetic mutations; pancreatic cancer; progression; therapeutics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36173644 PMCID: PMC9550249 DOI: 10.18632/aging.204310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.955
Figure 1Pro-pancreatic tumorigenic, aberrant genes/proteins and pathways. Signals mediated by mu-K-ras, mu-p53 and loss of p16 promote various uncontrollable cell growth, cell cycle progression and etc.
Figure 2Pancreatic cancer microenvironment. Pancreatic cancer lesions mainly include pancreatic cancer cells, suppressive lymphocytes, cancer-associated macrophages/fibroblasts and cancer-related cytokines/growth factors.
Figure 3Pathological changes in the progression of pancreatic tumors.