Cancer is often regarded as a process of asexual evolution driven by genomic and genetic instability. Mutation, selection and adaptation are by convention thought to occur primarily within, and to a lesser degree outside, the primary tumour. However, disseminated cancer cells that remain after 'curative' surgery exhibit extreme genomic heterogeneity before the manifestation of metastasis. This heterogeneity is later reduced by selected clonal expansion, suggesting that the disseminated cells had yet to acquire key traits of fully malignant cells. Abrogation of the cells' progression outside the primary tumour implies new challenges and opportunities for diagnosis and adjuvant therapies
The major clinical challenge of systemic cancer therapy is not eradication of the primary tumor, whi...
Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and our inability to identi...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...
Unlike the great advances that have been made in reducing breast cancer mortality through the multid...
Cancer metastasis is the lethal developmental step in cancer, responsible for the majority of cancer...
Advances in curative treatment to remove the primary tumor have increased survival of localized canc...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
How cancer cells acquire the competence to colonize distant organs remains a central question in can...
AbstractTumor progression to metastasis usually is assumed to occur through clonal genomic and epige...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing s...
Several models of evolution from primary cancers to metastases have been proposed; but the most wide...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Metastasis is the main cause of cancer death, yet the evolutionary processes behind it remain largel...
The major clinical challenge of systemic cancer therapy is not eradication of the primary tumor, whi...
Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and our inability to identi...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...
Unlike the great advances that have been made in reducing breast cancer mortality through the multid...
Cancer metastasis is the lethal developmental step in cancer, responsible for the majority of cancer...
Advances in curative treatment to remove the primary tumor have increased survival of localized canc...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
How cancer cells acquire the competence to colonize distant organs remains a central question in can...
AbstractTumor progression to metastasis usually is assumed to occur through clonal genomic and epige...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing s...
Several models of evolution from primary cancers to metastases have been proposed; but the most wide...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Metastasis is the main cause of cancer death, yet the evolutionary processes behind it remain largel...
The major clinical challenge of systemic cancer therapy is not eradication of the primary tumor, whi...
Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and our inability to identi...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...