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Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis

There is a fine balance between inflammation and tumorigenesis. While environmentally induced inflammatory condition can precede a malignant transformation, in other cases an oncogenic change of unknown origin can induce an inflammatory microenvironment that promotes the development of tumors. Regar...

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Autores principales: Neagu, Monica, Constantin, Carolina, Dumitrascu, Georgiana Roxana, Lupu, Andreea Roxana, Caruntu, Constantin, Boda, Daniel, Zurac, Sabina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Applied Systems srl 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6941591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32309563
http://dx.doi.org/10.15190/d.2015.30
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author Neagu, Monica
Constantin, Carolina
Dumitrascu, Georgiana Roxana
Lupu, Andreea Roxana
Caruntu, Constantin
Boda, Daniel
Zurac, Sabina
author_facet Neagu, Monica
Constantin, Carolina
Dumitrascu, Georgiana Roxana
Lupu, Andreea Roxana
Caruntu, Constantin
Boda, Daniel
Zurac, Sabina
author_sort Neagu, Monica
collection PubMed
description There is a fine balance between inflammation and tumorigenesis. While environmentally induced inflammatory condition can precede a malignant transformation, in other cases an oncogenic change of unknown origin can induce an inflammatory microenvironment that promotes the development of tumors. Regardless of its origin, maintaining the inflammation milieu has many tumor-promoting effects. As a result, inflammation can aid the proliferation and survival of malignant cells, can promote angiogenesis and metastasis, can down-regulate innate/adaptive immune responses, and can alter responses to hormones and chemotherapeutic agents. There is an abundance of studies unveiling molecular pathways of cancer-related inflammation; this wealth of information brings new insights into biomarkers domain in the diagnosis and treatment improvement pursue. In cutaneous tissue there is an established link between tissue damage, inflammation, and cancer development. Inflammation is a self-limiting process in normal healthy physiological conditions, while tumorigenesis is a complex mechanism of constitutive pathway activation. Once more, in cutaneous melanoma, there is an unmet need for inflammatory biomarkers that could improve prognostication. Targeting inflammation and coping with the phenotypic plasticity of melanoma cells represent rational strategies to specifically interfere with metastatic progression. We have shown that there is a prototype of intratumor inflammatory infiltrate depicting a good prognosis, infiltrate that is composed of numerous T cells CD3+, Langerhans cells, few/absent B cells CD20+ and few/absent plasma cells. Circulating immune cells characterized by phenotype particularities are delicately linked to the stage melanoma is diagnosed in. Hence circulatory immune sub-populations, with activated or suppressor phenotype would give the physician a more detailed immune status of the patient. A panel of tissue/circulatory immune markers can complete the immune status, can add value to the overall prognostic of the patient and, as a result direct/redirect the therapy choice. The future lies within establishing low-cost, affordable/available, easily reproducible assays that will complete the pre-clinical parameters of the patient.
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spelling pubmed-69415912020-04-17 Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis Neagu, Monica Constantin, Carolina Dumitrascu, Georgiana Roxana Lupu, Andreea Roxana Caruntu, Constantin Boda, Daniel Zurac, Sabina Discoveries (Craiova) Review Article There is a fine balance between inflammation and tumorigenesis. While environmentally induced inflammatory condition can precede a malignant transformation, in other cases an oncogenic change of unknown origin can induce an inflammatory microenvironment that promotes the development of tumors. Regardless of its origin, maintaining the inflammation milieu has many tumor-promoting effects. As a result, inflammation can aid the proliferation and survival of malignant cells, can promote angiogenesis and metastasis, can down-regulate innate/adaptive immune responses, and can alter responses to hormones and chemotherapeutic agents. There is an abundance of studies unveiling molecular pathways of cancer-related inflammation; this wealth of information brings new insights into biomarkers domain in the diagnosis and treatment improvement pursue. In cutaneous tissue there is an established link between tissue damage, inflammation, and cancer development. Inflammation is a self-limiting process in normal healthy physiological conditions, while tumorigenesis is a complex mechanism of constitutive pathway activation. Once more, in cutaneous melanoma, there is an unmet need for inflammatory biomarkers that could improve prognostication. Targeting inflammation and coping with the phenotypic plasticity of melanoma cells represent rational strategies to specifically interfere with metastatic progression. We have shown that there is a prototype of intratumor inflammatory infiltrate depicting a good prognosis, infiltrate that is composed of numerous T cells CD3+, Langerhans cells, few/absent B cells CD20+ and few/absent plasma cells. Circulating immune cells characterized by phenotype particularities are delicately linked to the stage melanoma is diagnosed in. Hence circulatory immune sub-populations, with activated or suppressor phenotype would give the physician a more detailed immune status of the patient. A panel of tissue/circulatory immune markers can complete the immune status, can add value to the overall prognostic of the patient and, as a result direct/redirect the therapy choice. The future lies within establishing low-cost, affordable/available, easily reproducible assays that will complete the pre-clinical parameters of the patient. Applied Systems srl 2015-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6941591/ /pubmed/32309563 http://dx.doi.org/10.15190/d.2015.30 Text en Copyright: © 2015, Neagu et al. and Applied Systems http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and it is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Review Article
Neagu, Monica
Constantin, Carolina
Dumitrascu, Georgiana Roxana
Lupu, Andreea Roxana
Caruntu, Constantin
Boda, Daniel
Zurac, Sabina
Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title_full Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title_fullStr Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title_full_unstemmed Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title_short Inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
title_sort inflammation markers in cutaneous melanoma - edgy biomarkers for prognosis
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6941591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32309563
http://dx.doi.org/10.15190/d.2015.30
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