Link Between Inflammation and Cancer (eBook)

Wounds that do not heal
eBook Download: PDF
2006 | 2006
XII, 254 Seiten
Springer US (Verlag)
978-0-387-26283-3 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Link Between Inflammation and Cancer -
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A link between inflammation and cancer has been established many years ago, yet it is only recently that the potential significance of this connection has become apparent. Although several examples of chronic inflammatory conditions, often induced by persistent irritation and/or infection, developing into cancer have been known for some time, there has been a notable resistance to contemplate the possibility that this association may apply in a causative way to other cancers. Examples for such progression from chronic inflammation to cancer are colon carcinoma developing with increased frequency in patients with ulcerative colitis, and the increased incidence of bladder cancer in patients suffering from chronic Schistosoma infection. Inflammation and cancer have been recognized to be linked in another context for many years, i.e., with regards to pathologies resembling chronic lacerations or 'wounds that do not heal.' More recently, the immunology of wound healing has given us clues as to the mechanistic link between inflammation and cancer, in as much as wounds and chronic inflammation turn off local cell-mediated immune responses and switch on growth factor release as well the growth of new blood vessels - angiogenesis. Both of these are features of most types of tumours, which suggest that tumours may require an immunologically shielded milieu and a growth factor-rich environment.
A link between inflammation and cancer has been established many years ago, yet it is only recently that the potential significance of this connection has become apparent. Although several examples of chronic inflammatory conditions, often induced by persistent irritation and/or infection, developing into cancer have been known for some time, there has been a notable resistance to contemplate the possibility that this association may apply in a causative way to other cancers. Examples for such progression from chronic inflammation to cancer are colon carcinoma developing with increased frequency in patients with ulcerative colitis, and the increased incidence of bladder cancer in patients suffering from chronic Schistosoma infection. Inflammation and cancer have been recognized to be linked in another context for many years, i.e., with regards to pathologies resembling chronic lacerations or 'wounds that do not heal.' More recently, the immunology of wound healing has given us clues as to the mechanistic link between inflammation and cancer, in as much as wounds and chronic inflammation turn off local cell-mediated immune responses and switch on growth factor release as well the growth of new blood vessels - angiogenesis. Both of these are features of most types of tumours, which suggest that tumours may require an immunologically shielded milieu and a growth factor-rich environment.

CONTENTS 5
FOREWORD 7
CONTRIBUTORS 10
Chapter 1 INFLAMMATION AND CANCER: The role of the immune response and angiogenesis 12
Chapter 2 CHRONIC INFLAMMATION AND PATHOGENESIS OF GI AND PANCREATIC CANCERS 50
Chapter 3 CYTOKINES, NF-KB, MICROENVIRONMENT, INTESTINAL INFLAMMATION AND CANCER 77
Chapter 4 REGULATION OF NF-KB TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVITY 98
Chapter 5 THE ROLE OF IMMUNE CELLS IN THE TUMOR MICROENVIRONMENT 112
Chapter 6 TUMOR- MICROENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS: The Selectin-Selectin Ligand Axis in Tumor-Endothelium Cross Talk 134
Chapter 7 CD95L/ FASL AND TRAIL IN TUMOUR SURVEILLANCE AND CANCER THERAPY 150
Chapter 8 INFECTION & NEOPLASTIC GROWTH 101
Chapter 9 CYTOKINES AS MEDIATORS AND TARGETS FOR CANCER CACHEXIA 206
Chapter 10 TARGETING NF-KB IN ANTICANCER ADJUNCTIVE CHEMOTHERAPY 225
Index 252

Erscheint lt. Verlag 5.3.2006
Reihe/Serie Cancer Treatment and Research
Cancer Treatment and Research
Zusatzinfo XII, 254 p.
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Onkologie
Studium 1. Studienabschnitt (Vorklinik) Biochemie / Molekularbiologie
Schlagworte angiogenesis • Apoptosis • Cancer Treatment • Cell • cytokines • Pancreatic cancer • pathogenesis • Tumor
ISBN-10 0-387-26283-0 / 0387262830
ISBN-13 978-0-387-26283-3 / 9780387262833
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