4.6 Review

The Many Facets of Therapy Resistance and Tumor Recurrence in Glioblastoma

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10030484

Keywords

glioblastoma; resistance; recurrence; tumor heterogeneity; hypermutation; metabolism; splicing; tumor microenvironment; hypoxia

Categories

Funding

  1. US NIH [P50CA221747, NS093843, NS095634, NS115403, K00CA234799]
  2. Lou and Jean Malnati Brain Tumor Institute at Northwestern Medicine

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GBM is the most lethal type of primary brain cancer, with therapy resistance attributed to both intrinsic factors like tumor heterogeneity and altered metabolomics, as well as extrinsic factors like hypoxia and an immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment. The escape mechanisms of tumor cells during therapy also contribute to treatment failure in GBM.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most lethal type of primary brain cancer. Standard care using chemo- and radio-therapy modestly increases the overall survival of patients; however, recurrence is inevitable, due to treatment resistance and lack of response to targeted therapies. GBM therapy resistance has been attributed to several extrinsic and intrinsic factors which affect the dynamics of tumor evolution and physiology thus creating clinical challenges. Tumor-intrinsic factors such as tumor heterogeneity, hypermutation, altered metabolomics and oncologically activated alternative splicing pathways change the tumor landscape to facilitate therapy failure and tumor progression. Moreover, tumor-extrinsic factors such as hypoxia and an immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) are the chief causes of immunotherapy failure in GBM. Amid the success of immunotherapy in other cancers, GBM has occurred as a model of resistance, thus focusing current efforts on not only alleviating the immunotolerance but also evading the escape mechanisms of tumor cells to therapy, caused by inter- and intra-tumoral heterogeneity. Here we review the various mechanisms of therapy resistance in GBM, caused by the continuously evolving tumor dynamics as well as the complex TME, which cumulatively contribute to GBM malignancy and therapy failure; in an attempt to understand and identify effective therapies for recurrent GBM.

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