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肿瘤相关巨噬细胞(TAM):卵巢癌转移的关键激活因子
Authors Yin M, Shen J, Yu S, Fei J, Zhu X, Zhao J, Zhai L, Sadhukhan A, Zhou J
Received 20 May 2019
Accepted for publication 24 September 2019
Published 21 October 2019 Volume 2019:12 Pages 8687—8699
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S216355
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Ms Aruna Narula
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr XuYu Yang
Abstract: Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) that appear in every stage of cancer progression are usually tumor-promoting cells and are present abundantly in the tumor-associated microenvironment. In ovarian cancer, the overall and intratumoral M1/M2 ratio is a relatively efficient TAM parameter for predicting the prognosis of patients, especially for serous tissue type cancer. TAMs exhibit immunological checkpoint modulators, such as the B7 family and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), and play a key role in the development, metastasis and invasion of ovarian cancer, but the underlying mechanism is barely understood. Ovarian cancer is a severe gynecological malignancy with high mortality. Ovarian cancer-associated death can primarily be attributed to cancer metastasis. The majority of patients are diagnosed with wide dissemination in the peritoneum and omentum, limiting the effectiveness of surgery and chemotherapy. In addition, unlike other well-documented cancers, metastasis through vasculature is not a usual dissemination pathway in ovarian cancer. This review sheds light on TAMs and the main process and mechanism of ovarian cancer metastasis.
Keywords: ovarian cancer, tumor associated macrophages, classical activated macrophage, alternative activated macrophage, transcoelomic metastasis, hematogenous metastasis
