McGill University and Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Canada.
McGill University and Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Canada.
Best Pract Res Clin Haematol. 2022 Mar;35(1):101349. doi: 10.1016/j.beha.2022.101349. Epub 2022 May 28.
Cancer associated thrombosis (CAT) including venous and arterial thromboembolism (VTE and ATE respectively), as well as subclinical hypercoagulable states pose a risk of serious morbidity and mortality and poor outcomes in cancer patients. It is increasingly clear that rather than being unspecific aftermaths of tumour growth, CAT is causally linked to the molecular phenotype of cancer cells and its genetic and epigenetic oncogenic drivers. Emerging data suggest that mutational events and factors modifying chromatin architecture in cancer cells influence the repertoire of genes (coagulome) the products of which may interact with the hemostatic system either directly or through modification of inflammatory system or release of cancer-related prothrombotic extracellular vesicles (EVs). Single cell transcriptomic analysis of brain tumours reveals the coexistence of multiple coagulant mechanisms associated with different cancer cell subpopulations and sites. These observations may suggest that a multipronged, biologically based approach may be needed to effectively predict and manage CAT.
癌症相关性血栓形成(CAT)包括静脉和动脉血栓栓塞症(VTE 和 ATE),以及亚临床高凝状态,会使癌症患者面临严重的发病率和死亡率以及不良预后的风险。越来越明显的是,CAT 不是肿瘤生长的非特异性后果,而是与癌细胞的分子表型及其遗传和表观遗传致癌驱动因素有因果关系。新出现的数据表明,癌细胞中突变事件和改变染色质结构的因素会影响基因的 repertoire(凝血组),其产物可能直接或通过炎症系统的修饰或释放与止血系统相互作用癌症相关的促血栓形成细胞外囊泡(EVs)。对脑瘤的单细胞转录组分析揭示了与不同癌细胞亚群和部位相关的多种凝血机制的共存。这些观察结果可能表明,需要采用多管齐下的、基于生物学的方法来有效预测和管理 CAT。