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Contribution of immune cells to cancer-related neuropathic pain: An updated review.

He MaZhenxiang PanBingjie LaiMingyue LiJingping Wang
Published in: Molecular pain (2023)
Given that the incidence of cancer is dramatically increasing nowadays, cancer-related neuropathic pain including tumor-related and therapy-related pain gradually attracts more attention from researchers, which basically behaves as a metabolic-neuro-immune disorder with worse clinical outcomes and prognosis. Among various mechanisms of neuropathic pain, the common underlying one is the activation of inflammatory responses around the injured or affected nerve(s). Innate and adaptive immune reactions following nerve injury together contribute to the regulation of pain. On the other hand, the tumor immune microenvironment involving immune cells, as exemplified by lymphocytes, macrophages, neutrophils and dendritic cells, inflammatory mediators as well as tumor metastasis have added additional characteristics for studying the initiation and maintenance of cancer-related neuropathic pain. Of interest, these immune cells in tumor microenvironment exert potent functions in promoting neuropathic pain through different signaling pathways. To this end, this review mainly focuses on the contribution of different types of immune cells to cancer-related neuropathic pain, aims to provide a comprehensive summary of how these immune cells derived from the certain tumor microenvironment participate in the pathogenesis of neuropathic pain. Furthermore, the clarification of roles of various immune cells in different tumor immune microenvironments associated with certain cancers under neuropathic pain states constitutes innovative biology that takes the pain field in a different direction, and thereby provides more opportunities for novel approaches for the prevention and treatment of cancer-related neuropathic pain.
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