The dormant cancer cell life cycle.
Tri Giang PhanPeter I CroucherPublished in: Nature reviews. Cancer (2020)
The success of targeted therapies and immunotherapies has created optimism that cancers may be curable. However, not all patients respond, drug resistance is common and many patients relapse owing to dormant cancer cells. These rare and elusive cells can disseminate early and hide in specialized niches in distant organs before being reactivated to cause disease relapse after successful treatment of the primary tumour. Despite their importance, we are yet to leverage knowledge generated from experimental models and translate the potential of targeting dormant cancer cells to prevent disease relapse in the clinic. This is due, at least in part, to the lack of adherence to consensus definitions by researchers, limited models that faithfully recapitulate this stage of metastatic spread and an absence of interdisciplinary approaches. However, the application of new high-resolution, single-cell technologies is starting to revolutionize the field and transcend classical reductionist models of studying individual cell types or genes in isolation to provide a global view of the complex underlying cellular ecosystem and transcriptional landscape that controls dormancy. In this Perspective, we synthesize some of these recent advances to describe the hallmarks of cancer cell dormancy and how the dormant cancer cell life cycle offers opportunities to target not only the cancer but also its environment to achieve a durable cure for seemingly incurable cancers.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- life cycle
- end stage renal disease
- high resolution
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- squamous cell carcinoma
- prognostic factors
- healthcare
- stem cells
- primary care
- metabolic syndrome
- drug delivery
- palliative care
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- papillary thyroid
- insulin resistance
- risk assessment
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- patient reported
- clinical practice
- skeletal muscle
- squamous cell
- childhood cancer