PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism?

Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism?
2023-06-23
(Press-News.org)

“Approaches targeted to prevent this post-therapy cancer cell repopulation should be uncovered to prevent tumor relapse and thus increase overall survival from this devastating disease.”

BUFFALO, NY- June 23, 2023 – A new research perspective was published in Oncoscience (Volume 10) on June 1, 2023, entitled, “Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism?”

The past two decades have brought great progress in the treatment of cancer as patients with the disease live longer having access to better diagnosis and therapeutic approaches. However, the disease remains incurable. One of the reasons for the high resilience of this disease is that cancer cells hide and escape from therapies thus leading to cancer recurrence. The process whereby cells escape therapy is referred to as cancer cell repopulation.

Cancer cell repopulation after therapy is a phenomenon that leads to therapeutic failure with the consequent relapse of the disease. The process is understudied and mechanisms need to be uncovered. In this new perspective, researchers Rewati Prakash and Carlos M. Telleria from McGill University and McGill University Health Centre discuss the issue of cancer cell repopulation after chemo- and radio-therapies. 

The researchers compiled evidence alleging that the repopulation of cancer cells can be originated from either cancer stem cells resistant to therapy, cancer cells that in response to therapy become polyploid and thereafter germinate into near-diploid rapid proliferating cells, and/or cells that respond to treatment undergoing senescence as a transient mechanism to survive, followed by the reinitiation of the cell cycle.

“Perhaps the better approach to eliminate cancer cell repopulation is a combination treatment involving first chemoradiation-induced transitory senescence, followed by senolytic therapies as recently discussed by Wang and colleagues [42].”

 

Continue reading: DOI: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncoscience.577 

Correspondence to: Carlos M. Telleria

Email: carlos.telleria@mcgill.ca 

Keywords: cancer cell repopulation, cancer stem cells, polyploidy, neosis, transitory senescence

 

About Oncoscience: 

Oncoscience is a peer-reviewed, open-access, traditional journal covering the rapidly growing field of cancer research, especially emergent topics not currently covered by other journals. This journal has a special mission: Freeing oncology from publication cost. It is free for the readers and the authors.

To learn more about Oncoscience, visit Oncoscience.us and connect with us on social media:

Twitter  Facebook  YouTube  LinkedIn 

For media inquiries, please contact media@impactjournals.com.

Oncoscience Journal Office

6666 East Quaker Str., Suite 1D

Orchard Park, NY 14127

Phone: 1-800-922-0957, option 4

###

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism? Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism? 2 Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism? 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mario Romero-Ortega to lead Biomedical Engineering at the University of Arizona

Mario Romero-Ortega to lead Biomedical Engineering at the University of Arizona
2023-06-23
Mario Romero-Ortega was selected through a nationwide search to head the University of Arizona Department of Biomedical Engineering, beginning with the fall 2023 semester. “I was drawn by the culture of collaboration, the quality of the students and faculty, and by the unified vision from University of Arizona leadership to impact biomedical engineering and health, from local to global,” he said. Romero-Ortega will join the College of Engineering from the University of Houston, where he serves in the College of Engineering as a Cullen ...

When majority men respect minority women, groups communicate better

2023-06-23
Kyle Emich, a professor of management at the Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics, along with Rachel Amey and Chad Forbes, then with UD’s Psychology and Brain Sciences Department, were searching for clues about why women’s knowledge often gets ignored in the workplace and how to improve the situation.  Drawing on both a problem-solving group exercise and measurements of brain activity, their findings, now published by the journal Small Group Research, illustrate ways stereotypes and attitudes can ...

Lessons in sustainability, evolution and human adaptation — courtesy of the Holocene

Lessons in sustainability, evolution and human adaptation — courtesy of the Holocene
2023-06-23
The El Gigante rockshelter in western Honduras is among only a handful of archaeological sites in the Americas that contain well-preserved botanical remains spanning the last 11,000 years. Considered one of the most important archaeological sites discovered in Central America in the last 40 years, El Gigante was recently nominated as a UNESCO World Heritage site. “No other location shows, as clearly as El Gigante,” state UNESCO materials about the site’s universal value, “the dynamic character of hunter-gatherer societies, and their adaptive way of life in the Central ...

New study reveals global reservoirs are becoming emptier

2023-06-23
Water is an essential and indispensable component of humanity’s everyday existence. As the global population grows and the climate warms, so does the water demand.  Over the past two decades, global reservoirs have become increasingly empty despite an overall increase in total storage capacity due to the construction of new reservoirs. Led by Dr. Huilin Gao, associate professor in the Zachry Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas A&M University, researchers used a new approach with satellite data to estimate the storage variations ...

Mass General Brigham researchers uncover immune cell marker and regulator of anti-tumor immunity

2023-06-23
B cells are thought to play a critical role in innate and adaptive immunity, but their exact role in anti-tumor immunity remains unknown. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital with expertise in immunology collaborated with experts in dermatology from Massachusetts General Hospital to further understand the role of B cells and identify a subset of cells that may play a critical role. In collaboration with the Broad Institute they used a technique called single-cell profiling, which allows them to look at all the genes ...

MedTech Innovation Forum Leads Day One at TCT 2023

2023-06-23
NEW YORK & SAN FRANCISCO – June 23, 2023 – Building on the resounding success of last year’s standing-room-only debut, the Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) and Fogarty Innovation are proud to present an even more dynamic and comprehensive TCT MedTech Innovation Forum in 2023. The highly anticipated program will feature additional learning tracks, expanded networking opportunities, increased attendee capacity, and the TCT Shark Tank Innovation Competition. The day-long interactive summit will take place on the first day of TCT 2023 (Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics), ...

21st century economic growth will be slower than we thought

2023-06-23
Key takeaways: A new study suggests global future economic growth will be slower than predicted, with developing nations taking longer to close the wealth gap and approach the income of wealthier nations Governments need to start planning for slower-growth scenarios, which may involve wealthier nations providing lower-income countries with financing for climate change adaptations  National debt and debt-ceiling talks may become more contentious in the coming decades  The global economy will grow slower in the 21st century ...

New analysis: Kaepernick was denied his “right to work” because he, like other Black male athletes before him, challenged structural racism and white supremacy

2023-06-23
A nascent literature is emerging that analyzes the case of Colin Kaepernick who was “locked out” of the National Football League (NFL) beginning in 2017 because he chose to protest police brutality, systemic racism, and white supremacy. Using status expectations states theory and prototypicality theory, this research re-conceptualizes Kaepernick’s lock-out as an infringement on his right to work. First, researchers utilize a modified case-study approach comparing his experiences to those of six other Black male athletes who were “locked out.” Second, researchers utilize data and “matched cases” to demonstrate empirically ...

All the immunity, none of the symptoms

All the immunity, none of the symptoms
2023-06-23
LA JOLLA (June 23, 2023)—Worldwide, more than a million deaths occur each year due to diarrheal diseases that lead to dehydration and malnutrition. Yet, no vaccine exists to fight or prevent these diseases, which are caused by bacteria like certain strains of E. coli. Instead, people with bacterial infections must rely on the body taking one of two defense strategies: kill the intruders or impair the intruders but keep them around. If the body chooses to impair the bacteria, then the disease can occur without the diarrhea, but the infection can still be transmitted—a process called asymptomatic carriage. Now, Salk scientists have found that ...

Higher efficiency catalyst key to green hydrogen

2023-06-23
The race to make the widespread use of intermittent renewable energy a reality has taken a step forward with new research by experts from the University of Adelaide who are improving the efficiency of iridium-based catalysts. “Currently it is difficult for commercial iridium oxide catalysts to achieve high activity and stability at the same time in proton exchange membrane water electrolysis (PEMWE),” said the University of Adelaide’s Associate Professor Yao Zheng, ARC Future Fellow, School of Chemical Engineering. “We have found that a lattice-water-assisted mechanism – a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sex differences drive substance use patterns in panic disorder patients

Multi-omics meets immune profiling in the quest to decode disease risk

Medication-induced sterol disruption: A silent threat to brain development and public health

Shining a light on DNA: a rapid, ultra-sensitive, PCR-free detection method

European hares are thriving in the city: New monitoring methods reveal high densities in Danish urban areas

Study: middle-aged Americans are lonelier than adults in other countries, age groups

World’s leading science competition identifies 19 breakthrough solutions around the globe with greatest potential to tackle the planetary crisis

Should farm fields be used for crops or solar? MSU research suggests both

Study: Using pilocarpine drops post goniotomy may reduce long-term glaucoma medication needs

Stanford Medicine researchers develop RNA blood test to detect cancers, other clues

Novel treatment approach for language disorder shows promise

Trash talk: As plastic use soars, researchers examine biodegradable solutions

Using ChatGPT, students might pass a course, but with a cost

Psilocibin, or “magic mushroom,” use increased among all age groups since decriminalization in 2019

More Americans are using psilocybin—especially those with mental health conditions, study shows

Meta-analysis finds Transcendental Meditation reduces post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms across populations and cultures

AACR: Five MD Anderson researchers honored with 2025 Scientific Achievement Awards

How not to form a state: Research reveals how imbalanced social-ecological acceleration led to collapse in early medieval Europe

Introduced trees are becoming more common in the eastern United States, while native diversity declines

The chemical basis for life can form in interstellar ice

How safe is the air to breathe? 50 million people in the US do not know

DDT residues persist in trout in some Canadian lakes 70 years after insecticide treatment, often at levels ten times that recommended as safe for the wildlife which consumes the fish

Building ‘cellular bridges’ for spinal cord repair after injury

Pediatric Academic Societies awards 33 Trainee Travel Grants for the PAS 2025 Meeting

Advancing understanding of lucid dreaming in humans

Two brain proteins are key to preventing seizures, research in flies suggests

From research to real-world, Princeton startup tackles soaring demand for lithium and other critical minerals

Can inpatient psychiatric care help teens amid a depressive crisis?

In kids, EEG monitoring of consciousness safely reduces anesthetic use

Wild chimps filmed sharing ‘boozy’ fruit

[Press-News.org] Cancer cell repopulation after therapy: which is the mechanism?