Cancer development is driven by mutations and selective forces, including the action of the immune system and interspecific competition. When administered to patients, anti-cancer therapies affect the development and dynamics of tumours, possibly with various degrees of resistance due to immunoediting and microenvironment. Tumours are able to express a variety of competing phenotypes with different attributes and thus respond differently to various anti-cancer therapies. In this paper, a mathematical framework incorporating a system of delay differential equations for the immune system activation cycle and an agent-based approach for tumour-immune interaction is presented. The focus is on those metastatic, secondary solid lesions that ar...
Resistance to chemotherapies, particularly to anticancer treatments, is an increasing medical concer...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...
A tumour grows when the total division (birth) rate of its cells exceeds their total mortality (deat...
Treatment of cancer relies increasingly on combination therapies to overcome cancer resistance, but ...
In the history of life, immune system and cancer have been engaged in an evolutionary arms race driv...
Background: Genetic instability is known to relate with carcinogenesis by providing tumors with a me...
Cancer development is an evolutionary process. A key selection pressure is exerted by therapy, one o...
Host immunity plays a central and complex role in dictating tumour progression. Solid tumours are co...
Metastases are a major cause of cancer-related death and despite the fact that they have been focus ...
Cancer is well-recognized as an evolutionary system, as first proposed by Cairns and Nowell more tha...
Most models of cancer assume that tumor cells populations, at low densities, grow exponentially to b...
Increasing experimental evidence suggests that epigenetic and microenvironmental factors play a key ...
Cancer results from an uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells. Sequentially accumulated genetic and e...
Several lines of compelling pre-clinical evidence identify chemotherapy as a potentially double-edge...
Research in two fronts has enabled the development of therapies that provide significant benefit to ...
Resistance to chemotherapies, particularly to anticancer treatments, is an increasing medical concer...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...
A tumour grows when the total division (birth) rate of its cells exceeds their total mortality (deat...
Treatment of cancer relies increasingly on combination therapies to overcome cancer resistance, but ...
In the history of life, immune system and cancer have been engaged in an evolutionary arms race driv...
Background: Genetic instability is known to relate with carcinogenesis by providing tumors with a me...
Cancer development is an evolutionary process. A key selection pressure is exerted by therapy, one o...
Host immunity plays a central and complex role in dictating tumour progression. Solid tumours are co...
Metastases are a major cause of cancer-related death and despite the fact that they have been focus ...
Cancer is well-recognized as an evolutionary system, as first proposed by Cairns and Nowell more tha...
Most models of cancer assume that tumor cells populations, at low densities, grow exponentially to b...
Increasing experimental evidence suggests that epigenetic and microenvironmental factors play a key ...
Cancer results from an uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells. Sequentially accumulated genetic and e...
Several lines of compelling pre-clinical evidence identify chemotherapy as a potentially double-edge...
Research in two fronts has enabled the development of therapies that provide significant benefit to ...
Resistance to chemotherapies, particularly to anticancer treatments, is an increasing medical concer...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...
A tumour grows when the total division (birth) rate of its cells exceeds their total mortality (deat...