The Role of Mechanical Forces in Tumor Growth and Therapy
Harvard University · Massachusetts General Hospital · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Tumors generate physical forces during growth and progression. These physical forces are able to compress blood and lymphatic vessels, reducing perfusion rates and creating hypoxia. When exerted directly on cancer cells, they can increase cells' invasive and metastatic potential. Tumor vessels-while nourishing the tumor-are usually leaky and tortuous, which further decreases perfusion. Hypoperfusion and hypoxia contribute to immune evasion, promote malignant progression and metastasis, and reduce the efficacy of a number of therapies, including radiation. In parallel, vessel leakiness together with vessel compression causes a uniformly elevated interstitial fluid pressure that hinders delivery of blood-borne…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.47
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 157
Authors
3- RKRakesh K. JainCorresponding
Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- JDJohn D. Martin
Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- TSTriantafyllos Stylianopoulos
University of Cyprus
Topics & keywords
- Lymphatic system
- Interstitial fluid
- Perfusion
- Hypoxia (environmental)
- Medicine
- Cancer research
- Blood vessel
- Cancer cell
- Good health and well-being