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Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm

Metastasis is often accompanied by radio- and chemotherapeutic resistance to anticancer treatments and is the major cause of death in cancer patients. Better understanding of how cancer cells circumvent therapeutic insults and how disseminated cancer clones generate life-threatening metastases would...

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Autores principales: Amey, Catherine L, Karnoub, Antoine E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33959299
http://dx.doi.org/10.17925/ohr.2017.13.01.45
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author Amey, Catherine L
Karnoub, Antoine E
author_facet Amey, Catherine L
Karnoub, Antoine E
author_sort Amey, Catherine L
collection PubMed
description Metastasis is often accompanied by radio- and chemotherapeutic resistance to anticancer treatments and is the major cause of death in cancer patients. Better understanding of how cancer cells circumvent therapeutic insults and how disseminated cancer clones generate life-threatening metastases would therefore be paramount to the development of effective therapeutic approaches for clinical management of malignant disease. Mounting reports over the past two decades have provided evidence for the existence of a minor population of highly malignant cells within liquid and solid tumors, which are capable of self-renewing and of regenerating secondary growths with the heterogeneity of the primary tumors from which they derive. These cells, called tumor-initiating cells or cancer stem cells (CSCs) exhibit increased resistance to standard radio- and chemotherapies and appear to have mechanisms that enable them to evade immune surveillance. CSCs are therefore considered to be responsible for systemic residual disease after cancer therapy, as well as for disease relapse. How CSCs develop, the nature of the interactions they establish with their microenvironment, their phenotypic and functional characteristics, as well as their molecular dependencies have all taken center stage in cancer therapy. Indeed, improved understanding of CSC biology is critical to the development of important CSC-based anti-neoplastic approaches that have the potential to radically improve cancer management. Here, we summarize some of the most pertinent elements regarding CSC development and properties, and highlight some of the clinical modalities in current development as anti-CSC therapeutics.
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spelling pubmed-80986712021-05-05 Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm Amey, Catherine L Karnoub, Antoine E Oncol Hematol Rev Article Metastasis is often accompanied by radio- and chemotherapeutic resistance to anticancer treatments and is the major cause of death in cancer patients. Better understanding of how cancer cells circumvent therapeutic insults and how disseminated cancer clones generate life-threatening metastases would therefore be paramount to the development of effective therapeutic approaches for clinical management of malignant disease. Mounting reports over the past two decades have provided evidence for the existence of a minor population of highly malignant cells within liquid and solid tumors, which are capable of self-renewing and of regenerating secondary growths with the heterogeneity of the primary tumors from which they derive. These cells, called tumor-initiating cells or cancer stem cells (CSCs) exhibit increased resistance to standard radio- and chemotherapies and appear to have mechanisms that enable them to evade immune surveillance. CSCs are therefore considered to be responsible for systemic residual disease after cancer therapy, as well as for disease relapse. How CSCs develop, the nature of the interactions they establish with their microenvironment, their phenotypic and functional characteristics, as well as their molecular dependencies have all taken center stage in cancer therapy. Indeed, improved understanding of CSC biology is critical to the development of important CSC-based anti-neoplastic approaches that have the potential to radically improve cancer management. Here, we summarize some of the most pertinent elements regarding CSC development and properties, and highlight some of the clinical modalities in current development as anti-CSC therapeutics. 2017-05-23 2017 /pmc/articles/PMC8098671/ /pubmed/33959299 http://dx.doi.org/10.17925/ohr.2017.13.01.45 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access: This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License, which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, adaptation, and reproduction provided the original author(s) and source are given appropriate credit.
spellingShingle Article
Amey, Catherine L
Karnoub, Antoine E
Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title_full Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title_fullStr Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title_short Targeting Cancer Stem Cells—A Renewed Therapeutic Paradigm
title_sort targeting cancer stem cells—a renewed therapeutic paradigm
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33959299
http://dx.doi.org/10.17925/ohr.2017.13.01.45
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