4.7 Article

High-grade tumours promote growth of other less-malignant tumours in the same prostate

期刊

JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
卷 253, 期 4, 页码 396-403

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/path.5604

关键词

high-grade prostate cancer; low-grade prostate cancer; angiogenesis; tumour-associated macrophages; tumour instigator; Ki67; Factor VIII; CD68; experimental rat prostate tumour model; multifocal primary prostate cancer

资金

  1. Swedish Cancer Foundation/Cancerfonden
  2. Cancer Research Foundation in Northern Sweden
  3. Swedish Research Council/Vetenskapsradet (UCAN)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The presence of high-grade tumors can increase the size and proliferation rate of low-grade tumors in experimental models and patient samples, as well as alter the surrounding microenvironment by increasing blood vessel density and macrophage density.
Prostate cancer is a multifocal disease, but if and how individual prostate tumours influence each other is largely unknown. We therefore explored signs of direct or indirect tumour-tumour interactions in experimental models and patient samples. Low-metastatic AT1 and high-metastatic MatLyLu (MLL) Dunning rat prostate cancer cells were injected into separate lobes of the ventral prostate of immunocompetent rats. AT1 tumours growing in the same prostate as MLL tumours had increased tumour size and proliferation compared to AT1 tumours growing alone. In addition, the vasculature and macrophage density surrounding the AT1 tumours were increased by MLL tumour closeness. In patient prostatectomy samples, selected to contain an index tumour [tumour with the highest grade, International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) grade 1, 2, 3 or 4] and a low-grade satellite tumour (ISUP grade 1), cell proliferation in low-grade satellite tumours gradually increased with increasing histological grade of the index tumour. The density of blood vessels and CD68(+) macrophages also increased around the low-grade satellite tumour if a high-grade index tumour was present. This suggests that high-grade tumours, by changing the prostate microenvironment, may increase the aggressiveness of low-grade lesions in the organ. Future studies are needed to explore the mechanisms behind tumour-tumour interactions and their clinical importance. (c) 2020 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.

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