4.6 Review

Tumor-Associated Macrophage Status in Cancer Treatment

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers12071987

Keywords

tumor-associated macrophages; chemotherapy; radiotherapy; immune-checkpoint blocking therapy; oncolytic virus; virotherapy

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Funding

  1. UniNA
  2. Compagnia San Paolo
  3. AIRC
  4. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC)
  5. Fondazione Cariplo (AIRC TRIDEO) [17216]

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Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) represent the most abundant innate immune cells in tumors. TAMs, exhibiting anti-inflammatory phenotype, are key players in cancer progression, metastasis and resistance to therapy. A high TAM infiltration is generally associated with poor prognosis, but macrophages are highly plastic cells that can adopt either proinflammatory/antitumor or anti-inflammatory/protumor features in response to tumor microenvironment stimuli. In the context of cancer therapy, many anticancer therapeutics, apart from their direct effect on tumor cells, display different effects on TAM activation status and density. In this review, we aim to evaluate the indirect effects of anticancer therapies in the modulation of TAM phenotypes and pro/antitumor activity.

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