Clinical and Biological Aspects of Disseminated Tumor Cells and Dormancy in Breast Cancer

Open access
Date
2022-06-28Type
- Review Article
Abstract
Progress in detection and treatment have drastically improved survival for early breast cancer patients. However, distant recurrence causes high mortality and is typically considered incurable. Cancer dissemination occurs via circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and up to 75% of breast cancer patients could harbor micrometastatses at time of diagnosis, while metastatic recurrence often occurs years to decades after treatment. During clinical latency, disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) can enter a state of cell cycle arrest or dormancy at distant sites, and are likely shielded from immune detection and treatment. While this is a challenge, it can also be seen as an outstanding opportunity to target dormant DTCs on time, before their transformation into lethal macrometastatic lesions. Here, we review and discuss progress made in our understanding of DTC and dormancy biology in breast cancer. Strides in our mechanistic insights of these features has led to the identification of possible targeting strategies, yet, their integration into clinical trial design is still uncertain. Incorporating minimally invasive liquid biopsies and rationally designed adjuvant therapies, targeting both proliferating and dormant tumor cells, may help to address current challenges and improve precision cancer care. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000559198Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaSubject
adjuvant therapy; chemotherapy; circulating tumor cells; disseminated tumor cells; metastasis; liquid biopsy; clinical trial designOrganisational unit
09736 - Aceto, Nicola / Aceto, Nicola
Funding
101001652 - Tumor-lock: forbid the generation of circulating tumor cells (EC)
801159-21 - Breast cancer metastasis TO the Bone with a first-of-its-kind 3D device that recapitulates physiological tissue-level complexity. (EC)
190077 - SNF-Förderungsprofessur PP00P3_190077 (SNF)
More
Show all metadata