Perspective: plasticity, the enemy of the good.

Cancer Drug Resist

Sorbonne Université, INSERM, Laboratory Cancer Biology and Therapeutics, Centre de Recherche Saint-Antoine, CRSA, Paris F-75012, France.

Published: June 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasticity is crucial in cancer research, but there is ongoing debate about how to define its importance in understanding cancer development.
  • Traditional models have provided insights into how cancer cells transform, leading to short-term therapeutic advances, but challenges like drug resistance continue to emerge.
  • Recent findings on the tumor microenvironment highlight the complexity of cancer, suggesting that prioritizing early clinical interventions over late ones could improve cancer research and treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Plasticity is an important feature of modern cancer research. However, the level at which we should consider it remains an open question. Such debate is not new in the field of cancer and can be exemplified by the different models explaining carcinogenesis. Those models mostly explain cell transformation through the deregulation of the internal circuitry. In the last years, those models dramatically increased our knowledge and led to a series of short-term successes in terms of therapeutics. However, cancer drug resistance inevitably arises. Recently, studies on the so-called tumor microenvironment enriched the cell-centered perspective but it also enlarged the complexity of cancer etiology in particular for advanced diseases. Here, we suggest that the plastic and multi-sites specific nature of cancer combined with our incapacity to promise cure should push towards a new perspective where early clinical actions, instead of late ones, should be heralded as the priority of cancer research and care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8992631PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/cdr.2019.23DOI Listing

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