Hypoxia-mediated decrease of ovarian cancer cells reaction to treatment: Significance for chemo-and immunotherapies

38Citations
Citations of this article
49Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Hypoxia, a common factor ruling the microenvironment composition, leads to tumor progression. In this hypoxic context, cytokines and cells cooperate to favor cancer development and metastasis. Tumor hypoxia is heterogeneously distributed. Oxygen gradients depend on the vicinity, functionality of blood vessels, and oxygen ability to diffuse into surrounding tissues. Thus, the vasculature state modulates the microenvironment of the tumor cells. Cells sense and react to small variations in oxygen tension, which explains the lack of tumor cells’ unicity in their reaction to drugs. Ovarian cancers are highly hypoxia-dependent, ascites worsening the access to oxygen, in their reactions to both chemotherapy and new immunotherapy. Consequently, hypoxia affects the results of immunotherapy, and is thus, crucial for the design of treatments. Controlling key immunosuppressive factors and receptors, as well as immune checkpoint molecule expression on tumor, immune and stromal cells, hypoxia induces immunosuppression. Consequently, new approaches to alleviate hypoxia in the tumor microenvironment bring promises for ovarian cancer immunotherapeutic strategies. This review focuses on the effects of hypoxia in the microenvironment and its consequences on tumor treatments. This opens the way to innovative combined treatments to the advantage of immunotherapy outcome in ovarian cancers.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Klemba, A., Bodnar, L., Was, H., Brodaczewska, K. K., Wcislo, G., Szczylik, C. A., & Kieda, C. (2020, December 2). Hypoxia-mediated decrease of ovarian cancer cells reaction to treatment: Significance for chemo-and immunotherapies. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21249492

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free