Bone metastasis: pathogenesis and therapeutic implications
- PMID: 18008175
- DOI: 10.1007/s10585-007-9112-8
Bone metastasis: pathogenesis and therapeutic implications
Abstract
Advanced cancers are prone to metastasize. Visceral metastases are more likely to be fatal, while patients with only metastases to bone can survive up to 10 years or more. However, effective treatments for bone metastases are not yet available and bisphosphonates improve the quality of life with no life-prolonging benefits. Bone metastases are classified as osteolytic, osteosclerotic or mixed lesions according to the bone cell types more prominently involved. Either conditions induce high morbidity and dramatically increase the risk of pathological fractures. Several molecular mechanisms bring about cancer cells to metastasize to bone, and osteotropic cancer cells are believed to acquire bone cell-like properties which improve homing, adhesion, proliferation and survival in the bone microenvironment. The acquisition of a bone cell pseudo-phenotype, denominated osteomimicry, is likely to rely on expression of osteoblastic and osteoclastic genes, thus requiring a multigenic programme. Several microenvironmental factors improve the ability of cancer cells to develop at skeletal sites, and a reciprocal deleterious stimulation generates a vicious cycle between the tumour cells and the cells residing in the bone environment. The impact of the stem cell niche in the development of bone metastases and in the phenomenon of tumour dormancy, that allows tumour cells to remain quiescent for decades before establishing overt lesions, is at present only speculative. However, the osteoblast niche, known to maintain the haematopoietic stem cell population in a quiescent status, is likely to be involved in the development of bone metastases and this promising research field is rapidly expanding.
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