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The impact of platelets on the metastatic potential of tumour cells

Hans Raskov, Adile Orhan, Mette Ø. Agerbæk, Ismail Gögenür

2024Heliyon26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In cancer, activation of platelets by tumor cells is critical to disease progression. Development of precise antiplatelet targeting may improve outcomes from anticancer therapy. Alongside a distinct shift in functionality such as pro-metastatic and pro-coagulant properties, platelet production is often accelerated significantly early in carcinogenesis and the cancer-associated thrombocytosis increases the risk of metastasis formation and thromboembolic events. Tumor-activated platelets facilitate the proliferation of migrating tumor cells and shield them from immune surveillance and physical stress during circulation. Additionally, platelet-tumor cell interactions promote tumor cell intravasation, intravascular arrest, and extravasation through a repertoire of adhesion molecules, growth factors and angiogenic factors. Particularly, the presence of circulating tumor cell (CTC) clusters in association with platelets is a negative prognostic indicator. The contribution of platelets to the metastatic process is an area of intense investigation and this review provides an overview of the advances in understanding platelet-tumor cell interactions and their contribution to disease progression. Also, we review the potential of targeting platelets to interfere with the metastatic process.

Topics & Concepts

PlateletCancer researchMedicineInternal medicineInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease PrognosisProstate Cancer Treatment and ResearchAngiogenesis and VEGF in Cancer
The impact of platelets on the metastatic potential of tumour cells | Litcius