An idiosyncratic zonated stroma encapsulates desmoplastic liver metastases and originates from injured liver.
Carlos Fernandez MoroNatalie GeyerSara HarriziYousra HamidiSara SöderqvistDanyil KuznyecovEvelina Tidholm QvistMedia Salmonson SchaadLaura HermannAmanda LindbergRainer L HeuchelAlfonso Martín-BernabéSoniya DhanjalAnna C NavisChristina VillardAndrea C Del ValleLorand BozókyErnesto SparrelidLuc DirixCarina StrellArne ÖstmanBernhard SchmiererPeter B VermeulenJennie EngstrandBéla BozókyMarco GerlingPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
A perimetastatic capsule is a strong positive prognostic factor in liver metastases, but its origin remains unclear. Here, we systematically quantify the capsule's extent and cellular composition in 263 patients with colorectal cancer liver metastases to investigate its clinical significance and origin. We show that survival improves proportionally with increasing encapsulation and decreasing tumor-hepatocyte contact. Immunostaining reveals the gradual zonation of the capsule, transitioning from benign-like NGFR high stroma at the liver edge to FAP high stroma towards the tumor. Encapsulation correlates with decreased tumor viability and preoperative chemotherapy. In mice, chemotherapy and tumor cell ablation induce capsule formation. Our results suggest that encapsulation develops where tumor invasion into the liver plates stalls, representing a reparative process rather than tumor-induced desmoplasia. We propose a model of metastases growth, where the efficient tumor colonization of the liver parenchyma and a reparative liver injury reaction are opposing determinants of metastasis aggressiveness.