بایگانی برچسب برای: Metastasis

Cervical.Cancer.[taliem.ir]

Cervical Cancer

Cervix epidermoid carcinoma (CxCa) is the most frequent neoplasia of the feminine genital tract among the so-called third world countries. In countries referred to as frst world countries early detection and treatment has given positive long-term results in women with CxCa. In Western Europe, Australia and New Zealand, for every 100,000 women diagnosed at least two will die from this disease. According to the WHO, in eastern Africa the amount of deaths among 30-year-old women is much higher (27.6%). Although most cases of cervical cancer can be prevented by routine screening and treatment of precancerous lesions, cervical cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality among women in developing countries. The aim of the present chapter is to present a general view about the history of the Cervical Cancer, we think this knowledge improve today the results in the management of these patients.
Tumor.Dormancy.and.Recurrence[taliem.ir]

Epigenetic Regulation of Cancer Dormancy as a Plasticity Mechanism for Metastasis Initiation

Metastasis is responsible for the vast majority of cancer-related deaths. However, our understanding of this complex process is still vastly limited, as is the ability to prevent metastasis. Paradoxically, while clinical trials are commonly performed in patients with advanced metastatic disease, disseminated residual disease is rarely targeted. This eliminates a critical window of opportunity to prevent metastasis. Disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) that seed metastases can remain undetected years to decades after treatment of the primary tumor. Late relapse may be due to the ability of DTCs to survive in a quiescent or dormant state and evade therapies. Quiescence, a reversible growth arrest coupled to robust survival, has emerged as a ftting biological defnition for dormancy of single DTCs, but these mechanism remain as one of the least understood “black boxes” in cancer biology. Because of the reversible nature of dormancy, it has been proposed that epigenetic changes are key in regulating the onset, maintenance and reactivation from this state. This is mediated by the post-translational modifcation of histones (PTMs), ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling, DNA methylation, and the incorporation of specialized histone variants into chromatin. Many morphogenetic and micro-environmental cues like retinoic acid, TGFβs, hematopoietic stem cell dormancy regulating cues and BMPs are known to cause chromatin modifcations that dictate cell fate; these same cues were linked to the induction of cancer cell dormancy. Despite progress in understanding cancer cell dormancy, key questions remain open regarding its epigenetic nature. In this chapter we attempt to address key questions related to this topic using available data or hypothetical scenarios to build a model to further dissect how cancer cell dormancy can be manipulated epigenetically as a therapeutic strategy.