Price J E
Department of Cell Biology, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030.
In Vivo. 1994 Jan-Feb;8(1):145-54.
The dissemination of cells from a primary tumor, resulting in the progressive growth of metastatic carcinoma in distant sites, including bone, lungs, liver and brain, is the most common cause of death of breast cancer patients. The results of studies using rodent tumors and human cancer cell lines, combined with clinical observations, suggest that metastasis is not a random event. It is the result of a sequence of selective events, many of which involve interactions with elements of the microenvironment of the primary and the metastatic tumors. A greater understanding of the metastatic phenotype from cellular and molecular analyses will provide a rationale approach for controlling this most lethal aspect of breast cancer.
原发性肿瘤细胞的扩散,导致远处部位(包括骨骼、肺、肝脏和脑)转移性癌的渐进性生长,是乳腺癌患者最常见的死亡原因。使用啮齿动物肿瘤和人类癌细胞系的研究结果,结合临床观察,表明转移并非随机事件。它是一系列选择性事件的结果,其中许多事件涉及与原发性肿瘤和转移性肿瘤微环境成分的相互作用。从细胞和分子分析中更深入地了解转移表型,将为控制乳腺癌这一致命方面提供合理的方法。