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Review
. 2020 Jul 29;10(16):8538-8553.
doi: 10.1002/ece3.6590. eCollection 2020 Aug.

Eco-oncology: Applying ecological principles to understand and manage cancer

Affiliations
Review

Eco-oncology: Applying ecological principles to understand and manage cancer

Brent A Reynolds et al. Ecol Evol. .

Abstract

Cancer is a disease of single cells that expresses itself at the population level. The striking similarities between initiation and growth of tumors and dynamics of biological populations, and between metastasis and ecological invasion and community dynamics suggest that oncology can benefit from an ecological perspective to improve our understanding of cancer biology. Tumors can be viewed as complex, adaptive, and evolving systems as they are spatially and temporally heterogeneous, continually interacting with each other and with the microenvironment and evolving to increase the fitness of the cancer cells. We argue that an eco-evolutionary perspective is essential to understand cancer biology better. Furthermore, we suggest that ecologically informed therapeutic approaches that combine standard of care treatments with strategies aimed at decreasing the evolutionary potential and fitness of neoplastic cells, such as disrupting cell-to-cell communication and cooperation, and preventing successful colonization of distant organs by migrating cancer cells, may be effective in managing cancer as a chronic condition.

Keywords: cancer; cancer ecology; cell to cell communication; chaos; complex adaptive systems; cytotoxic cancer therapies; ecological therapy; ecology; eco‐oncology; evolution of resistance; metastasis; non‐linear dynamics; oncology.

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Conflict of interest statement

None.

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