Locally sourced: site-specific immune barriers to metastasis

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Abstract

Tumour cells migrate very early from primary sites to distant sites, and yet metastases often take years to manifest themselves clinically or never even surface within a patient’s lifetime. This pause in cancer progression emphasizes the existence of barriers that constrain the growth of disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) at distant sites. Although the nature of these barriers to metastasis might include DTC-intrinsic traits, recent studies have established that the local microenvironment also controls the formation of metastases. In this Perspective, I discuss how site-specific differences of the immune system might be a major selective growth restraint on DTCs, and argue that harnessing tissue immunity will be essential for the next stage in immunotherapy development that reliably prevents the establishment of metastases.

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Correia, A. L. (2023). Locally sourced: site-specific immune barriers to metastasis. Nature Reviews Immunology, 23(8), 522–538. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41577-023-00836-2

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