6533b829fe1ef96bd128ab74

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Una visión integral del cáncer (II). Campos de estudio y biomarcadores emergentes

Rosa NogueraLuis De La Cruz-merinoRebeca Burgos-panaderoEsther Gamero-sandemetrioTomás ÁLvaro Naranjo

subject

0301 basic medicineTumor microenvironmentStromal cellbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentImmunotherapymedicine.disease_causeWarburg effectPathology and Forensic Medicine03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineImmune system030220 oncology & carcinogenesismedicineCancer researchCarcinogenesisbusinessMechanotherapyReprogramming

description

Pathology and clinical oncology work hand in hand so that techniques and treatments, biomarkers and antibodies share the common goal of identifying integral new treatment regimens that are more effective and less aggressive. Evidence shows how tissue mechanics affect carcinogenesis and that tumor heterogeneity depends on metabolic stromal alteration and the Warburg effect of malignant cells, regulated directly by PD-1, becoming a target for immunotherapy. Proliferation and apoptosis depend on mitochondrial dysfunction in tumor cells, determining the grade of chemo/radio-resistance. The status of intestinal microbiota regulates immune response, tumor microenvironment structure and oncologic treatment response, whilst the Vitamin D receptor allows reprogramming of tumor stroma. Current collaboration between basic and clinical research paves the way for future investigation into areas such as tumor microenvironment and molecular mechanotherapy, metabolism and immunotherapy, mitochondria and oncogenesis, microbiota and chemotherapy, psychoneuroendocrine axis and homeostatic imbalance, epigenetics and reprogramming possibilities of the tumor phenotype. We review new prognostic and predictive biomarkers emerging from these fields of knowledge, opening up new therapeutic possibilities.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.patol.2019.04.005