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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Altered Extracellular Matrix Correlates With An Immunosuppressive Tumor Microenvironment And Disease Progression In Younger Adults With Oral Cavity Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Leonard Estephan, Gaurav Kumar, Matthew Stewart, Raphael Banoub, Alban Linnenbach, Larry Harshyne, Ubaldo Martinez-Outshoorn, My Mahoney, Joseph Curry, Jennifer Johnson, Andrew South, Adam Luginbuhl Jun 2024

Altered Extracellular Matrix Correlates With An Immunosuppressive Tumor Microenvironment And Disease Progression In Younger Adults With Oral Cavity Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Leonard Estephan, Gaurav Kumar, Matthew Stewart, Raphael Banoub, Alban Linnenbach, Larry Harshyne, Ubaldo Martinez-Outshoorn, My Mahoney, Joseph Curry, Jennifer Johnson, Andrew South, Adam Luginbuhl

Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers

INTRODUCTION: Oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) occurs most frequently in patients >60 years old with a history of tobacco and alcohol use. Epidemiological studies describe increased incidence of OSCC in younger adults (years). Despite its poor prognosis, knowledge of OSCC tumor microenvironment (TME) characteristics in younger adults is scarce and could help inform possible resistance to emerging treatment options.

METHODS: Patients with OSCC were evaluated using TCGA-HNSC (n=121) and a stage and subsite-matched institutional cohort (n=8) to identify differential gene expression focusing on the extracellular matrix (ECM) and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) processes in younger (≤45 years) vs. older adults …


A Representative Clinical Course Of Progression, With Molecular Insights, Of Hormone Receptor-Positive, Her2-Negative Bone Metastatic Breast Cancer, Elizabeth Magno, Karen M. Bussard Mar 2024

A Representative Clinical Course Of Progression, With Molecular Insights, Of Hormone Receptor-Positive, Her2-Negative Bone Metastatic Breast Cancer, Elizabeth Magno, Karen M. Bussard

Department of Pharmacology, Physiology, and Cancer Biology Faculty Papers

Despite treatment advances, breast cancer remains a leading cause of death of women in the United States, mostly due to metastatic disease. Bone is a preferential site for breast cancer metastasis, and most metastatic breast cancer patients experience bone involvement at the time of death. The majority of patients with bone metastatic breast cancer are first diagnosed with and treated for early-stage disease, and from development of early-stage breast cancer to the recurrence of cancer in the bones, up to 30 years may elapse. Throughout this timeframe, a typical patient undergoes many treatments that have effects on the bone microenvironment. …


Immunotherapy Resistance In Solid Tumors: Mechanisms And Potential Solutions, Daniel Lefler, Steven Manobianco, Babar Bashir Feb 2024

Immunotherapy Resistance In Solid Tumors: Mechanisms And Potential Solutions, Daniel Lefler, Steven Manobianco, Babar Bashir

Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers

While the emergence of immunotherapies has fundamentally altered the management of solid tumors, cancers exploit many complex biological mechanisms that result in resistance to these agents. These encompass a broad range of cellular activities - from modification of traditional paradigms of immunity via antigen presentation and immunoregulation to metabolic modifications and manipulation of the tumor microenvironment. Intervening on these intricate processes may provide clinical benefit in patients with solid tumors by overcoming resistance to immunotherapies, which is why it has become an area of tremendous research interest with practice-changing implications. This review details the major ways cancers avoid both natural …


Mouse Models Of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia And Richter Transformation: What We Have Learnt And What We Are Missing, Maria Teresa Sabrina Bertilaccio, Shih-Shih Chen Jan 2024

Mouse Models Of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia And Richter Transformation: What We Have Learnt And What We Are Missing, Maria Teresa Sabrina Bertilaccio, Shih-Shih Chen

Student and Faculty Publications

Although the chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) treatment landscape has changed dramatically, unmet clinical needs are emerging, as CLL in many patients does not respond, becomes resistant to treatment, relapses during treatment, or transforms into Richter. In the majority of cases, transformation evolves the original leukemia clone into a diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Richter transformation (RT) represents a dreadful clinical challenge with limited therapeutic opportunities and scarce preclinical tools. CLL cells are well known to highly depend on survival signals provided by the tumor microenvironment (TME). These signals enhance the frequency of immunosuppressive cells with protumor function, including regulatory CD4