AI Article Synopsis

  • Breast cancer treatment has improved over the last 30 years, leading to lower mortality rates, but once the cancer spreads, survival rates drop significantly (22% at 5 years, 13% at 10 years for metastatic cases).
  • The complexity and diversity (heterogeneity) of primary tumors, which contain different cell types and factors, complicate the treatment of metastatic disease.
  • Recent research shows that both malignant and pre-malignant cells exhibit a process called epithelial-mesenchymal (E-M) plasticity, which plays a crucial role in metastasis and resistance to therapy; understanding this could help develop new treatment strategies to improve survival rates for patients with metastatic breast cancer.

Article Abstract

As a field we have made tremendous strides in treating breast cancer, with a decline in the past 30 years of overall breast cancer mortality. However, this progress is met with little affect once the disease spreads beyond the primary site. With a 5-year survival rate of 22%, 10-year of 13%, for those patients with metastatic breast cancer (mBC), our ability to effectively treat wide spread disease is minimal. A major contributing factor to this ineffectiveness is the complex make-up, or heterogeneity, of the primary site. Within a primary tumor, secreted factors, malignant and pre-malignant epithelial cells, immune cells, stromal fibroblasts and many others all reside alongside each other creating a dynamic environment contributing to metastasis. Furthermore, heterogeneity contributes to our lack of understanding regarding the cells' remarkable ability to undergo epithelial/non-cancer stem cell (CSC) to mesenchymal/CSC (E-M/CSC) plasticity. The enhanced invasion & motility, tumor-initiating potential, and acquired therapeutic resistance which accompanies E-M/CSC plasticity implicates a significant role in metastasis. While most work trying to understand E-M/CSC plasticity has been done on malignant cells, recent evidence is emerging concerning the ability for pre-malignant cells to undergo E-M/CSC plasticity and contribute to the metastatic process. Here we will discuss the importance of E-M/CSC plasticity within malignant and pre-malignant populations of the tumor. Moreover, we will discuss how one may potentially target these populations, ultimately disrupting the metastatic cascade and increasing patient survival for those with mBC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7192216PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/2394-4722.2019.26DOI Listing

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