4.3 Review

Cancer micrometastasis and tumour dormancy

Journal

APMIS
Volume 116, Issue 7-8, Pages 754-770

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0463.2008.01033.x

Keywords

tumour dormancy; cancer micrometastasis; dissemintaed tumour cells; microenvironment; oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes; angiogenesis; immune surveillance

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Many epithelial cancers carry a poor prognosis even after curative resection of early stage tumours. Tumour progression in these cancer patients has been attributed to the existence and persistence of disseminated tumour cells (DTC) in various body compartments as a sign of minimal residual disease. Bone marrow (BM) has been shown to be a common homing organ and reservoir for DTC. A significant correlation between the presence of DTC in BBM and metastatic relapse has been reported in various tumour types. However, only a portion of patients with DTC in BM at primary surgery relapse. Thus far, little is known about the conditions required for the persisitence of dormancy of the escape from the dormant phase into the active phase of metastasis formation. Thereby, this peculiar stage of conveivably balanced tumour cell division and death may last for decades in cancer patients. Most likely, the ability of a dormant DTC to be activated is a complex process involving (i) somatic aberrations in the tumor cells, (ii) the interaction of the DTC with the new microenvironment at the secondary site, and (iii) hereditary components of the host (i.e., cancer patients). In this review, we will summarize the key findings of research on micrometastatic cancer cells and discuss these findings in the context of the concept of tumour dormancy.

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