D'Asti Esterina, Fang Yi, Rak Janusz
Department of Pediatrics, McGill University. Montreal Children's Hospital, The Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Rambam Maimonides Med J. 2014 Oct 29;5(4):e0030. doi: 10.5041/RMMJ.10164. eCollection 2014 Oct.
The coagulation system constitutes an important facet of the unique vascular microenvironment in which primary and metastatic brain tumors evolve and progress. While brain tumor cells express tissue factor (TF) and other effectors of the coagulation system (coagulome), their propensity to induce local and peripheral thrombosis is highly diverse, most dramatic in the case of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), and less obvious in pediatric tumors. While the immediate medical needs often frame the discussion on current clinical challenges, the coagulation pathway may contribute to brain tumor progression through subtle, context-dependent, and non-coagulant effects, such as induction of inflammation, angiogenesis, or by responding to iatrogenic insults (e.g. surgery). In this regard, the emerging molecular diversity of brain tumor suptypes (e.g. in glioma and medulloblastoma) highlights the link between oncogenic pathways and the tumor repertoire of coagulation system regulators (coagulome). This relationship may influence the mechanisms of spontaneous and therapeutically provoked tumor cell interactions with the coagulation system as a whole. Indeed, oncogenes (EGFR, MET) and tumor suppressors (PTEN, TP53) may alter the expression, activity, and vesicular release of tissue factor (TF), and cause other changes. Conversely, the coagulant microenvironment may also influence the molecular evolution of brain tumor cells through selective and instructive cues. We suggest that effective targeting of the coagulation system in brain tumors should be explored through molecular stratification, stage-specific analysis, and more personalized approaches including thromboprophylaxis and adjuvant treatment aimed at improvement of patient survival.
凝血系统是原发性和转移性脑肿瘤发生发展所处的独特血管微环境的一个重要方面。虽然脑肿瘤细胞表达组织因子(TF)和凝血系统的其他效应物(凝血组),但其诱导局部和外周血栓形成的倾向差异很大,在多形性胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)中最为显著,而在儿童肿瘤中则不太明显。虽然当前的临床挑战往往围绕直接的医疗需求展开讨论,但凝血途径可能通过微妙的、依赖于背景的非凝血作用,如诱导炎症、血管生成或对医源性损伤(如手术)做出反应,从而促进脑肿瘤的进展。在这方面,脑肿瘤亚型(如胶质瘤和髓母细胞瘤)新出现的分子多样性突出了致癌途径与凝血系统调节因子(凝血组)的肿瘤谱之间的联系。这种关系可能会影响肿瘤细胞与整个凝血系统自发和治疗性激发的相互作用机制。事实上,癌基因(EGFR、MET)和肿瘤抑制基因(PTEN、TP53)可能会改变组织因子(TF)的表达、活性和囊泡释放,并引起其他变化。相反,凝血微环境也可能通过选择性和指导性信号影响脑肿瘤细胞的分子进化。我们建议,应通过分子分层、阶段特异性分析以及更个性化的方法来探索有效靶向脑肿瘤凝血系统,包括血栓预防和旨在提高患者生存率的辅助治疗。