The Clinical Significance of Hypoxia in Human Cancers

被引:187
作者
Dhani, Neesha [1 ,2 ]
Fyles, Anthony [3 ,4 ]
Hedley, David [1 ,2 ]
Milosevic, Michael [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Princess Margaret Canc Ctr, Dept Med Oncol, Toronto, ON M5G 2M9, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Princess Margaret Canc Ctr, Radiat Med Program, Toronto, ON M5G 2M9, Canada
[4] Univ Toronto, Dept Radiat Oncol, Toronto, ON, Canada
关键词
SQUAMOUS-CELL CARCINOMA; POSITRON-EMISSION-TOMOGRAPHY; GENE-EXPRESSION CLASSIFIER; TUMOR HYPOXIA; ADVANCED HEAD; NECK-CANCER; PHASE-III; PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE; HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS; TARGETING HYPOXIA;
D O I
10.1053/j.semnuclmed.2014.11.002
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Hypoxia is present to some extent in most solid malignant human cancers because of an imbalance between the limited oxygen delivery capacity of the abnormal vasculature and the high oxygen consumption of tumor cells. This drives a complex and dynamic compensatory response to enable continued cell survival, including genomic changes leading to selection of hypoxia-adapted cells with a propensity to invade locally, metastasize, and recur following surgery or radiotherapy. There is indisputable clinical evidence from numerous observational and therapeutic studies across a range of tumor types to implicate hypoxia as a key determinant of cancer behavior and treatment outcome. Despite this, hypoxia-targeted treatment has failed to influence clinical practice. This is explained, in part, by emerging findings to indicate that hypoxia is not equally important in all patients even when present to the same extent. The impact of hypoxia on patient outcome and the benefit of hypoxia-targeted treatments are greatest in situations where hypoxia is a primary biological driver of disease behavior patients with tumors having a "hypoxic driver" phenotype. The challenge for the clinical and scientific communities moving forward is to develop robust precision cancer medicine strategies for identifying these patients in the setting of other etiologic, genomic, and host-tumor factors, considering not only the state of the tumor at diagnosis but also changing patient and tumor characteristics over time. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:110 / 121
页数:12
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