Tohme Samer, Kameneva Marina V, Yazdani Hamza O, Sud Vikas, Goswami Julie, Loughran Patricia, Huang Hai, Simmons Richard L, Tsung Allan
Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Oncotarget. 2017 May 31;8(35):59854-59866. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.18322. eCollection 2017 Aug 29.
Surgery, a crucial therapeutic modality in the treatment of solid tumors, can induce sterile inflammatory processes which can result in metastatic progression. Liver ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) injury, an inevitable consequence of hepatic resection of metastases, has been shown to foster hepatic capture of circulating cancer cells and accelerate metastatic growth. Efforts to reduce these negative consequences have not been thoroughly investigated. Drag reducing polymers (DRPs) are blood-soluble macromolecules that can, in nanomolar concentrations, increase tissue perfusion, decrease vascular resistance and decrease near-wall microvascular concentration of neutrophils and platelets thereby possibly reducing the inflammatory microenvironment. We hypothesize that DRP can potentially be used to ameliorate metastatic capture of tumor cells and tumor growth within the I/R liver.
Experiments were performed utilizing a segmental ischemia model of mice livers. Five days prior or immediately prior to ischemia, murine colon adenocarcinoma cells (MC38) were injected into the spleen. DRP (polyethylene oxide) or a control of low-molecular-weight polyethylene glycol without drag reducing properties were administered intraperitoneally at the onset of reperfusion.
After three weeks from I/R, we observed that liver I/R resulted in an increased ability to capture and foster growth of circulating tumor cells; in addition, the growth of pre-existing micrometastases was accelerated three weeks later. These effects were significantly curtailed when mice were treated with DRPs at the time of I/R. Mechanistic investigations in vivo indicated that DRPs protected the livers from I/R injury as evidenced by significant decreases in hepatocellular damage, neutrophil recruitment into the liver, formation of neutrophil extracellular traps, deposition of platelets, formation of microthrombi within the liver sinusoids and release of inflammatory cytokines.
DRPs significantly attenuated metastatic tumor development and growth. DRPs warrant further investigation as a potential treatment for liver I/R injury in the clinical setting to improve cancer-specific outcomes.
手术作为实体瘤治疗中的关键治疗方式,可引发无菌性炎症过程,进而导致转移进展。肝缺血再灌注(I/R)损伤是肝转移瘤切除不可避免的后果,已被证明会促进肝脏对循环癌细胞的捕获并加速转移灶生长。减少这些负面影响的努力尚未得到充分研究。减阻聚合物(DRPs)是可溶于血液的大分子,在纳摩尔浓度下,可增加组织灌注、降低血管阻力并降低中性粒细胞和血小板在近壁微血管中的浓度,从而可能减少炎症微环境。我们假设DRP可能用于改善I/R肝脏内肿瘤细胞的转移捕获和肿瘤生长。
利用小鼠肝脏节段性缺血模型进行实验。在缺血前五天或即将缺血前,将小鼠结肠腺癌细胞(MC38)注入脾脏。在再灌注开始时腹腔注射DRP(聚环氧乙烷)或无减阻特性的低分子量聚乙二醇作为对照。
I/R三周后,我们观察到肝脏I/R导致捕获和促进循环肿瘤细胞生长的能力增强;此外,三周后已存在的微转移灶生长加速。当小鼠在I/R时接受DRP治疗时,这些影响显著减轻。体内机制研究表明,DRP保护肝脏免受I/R损伤,这表现为肝细胞损伤、中性粒细胞向肝脏募集、中性粒细胞胞外陷阱形成、血小板沉积、肝血窦内微血栓形成以及炎性细胞因子释放均显著减少。
DRP显著减弱了转移性肿瘤的发展和生长。DRP作为临床环境中肝I/R损伤潜在治疗方法,有望进一步研究以改善癌症特异性结局。