血管生成
医学
血管
转移
癌症
疾病
内科学
机制(生物学)
病理
癌症研究
认识论
哲学
作者
Elizabeth A. Kuczynski,Peter Vermeulen,Francesco Pezzella,Robert S. Kerbel,Andrew R. Reynolds
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41571-019-0181-9
摘要
All solid tumours require a vascular supply in order to progress. Although the ability to induce angiogenesis (new blood vessel growth) has long been regarded as essential to this purpose, thus far, anti-angiogenic therapies have shown only modest efficacy in patients. Importantly, overshadowed by the literature on tumour angiogenesis is a long-standing, but continually emerging, body of research indicating that tumours can grow instead by hijacking pre-existing blood vessels of the surrounding nonmalignant tissue. This process, termed vessel co-option, is a frequently overlooked mechanism of tumour vascularization that can influence disease progression, metastasis and response to treatment. In this Review, we describe the evidence that tumours located at numerous anatomical sites can exploit vessel co-option. We also discuss the proposed molecular mechanisms involved and the multifaceted implications of vessel co-option for patient outcomes. Despite much hope, anti-angiogenic agents have largely failed to achieve the promise demonstrated in preclinical models. In this Review, the authors discuss an alternative hypothesis — vessel co-option — that might explain many of these failures and describe the evidence for a role of this largely overlooked aspect of tumour biology.
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