Author:
Waldum Helge,Slupphaug Geir
Abstract
Malignancy manifests itself by deregulated growth and the ability to invade surrounding tissues or metastasize to other organs. These properties are due to genetic and/or epigenetic changes, most often mutations. Many aspects of carcinogenesis are known, but the cell of origin has been insufficiently focused on, which is unfortunate since the regulation of its growth is essential to understand the carcinogenic process and guide treatment. Similarly, the concept of cancer stem cells as cells having the ability to stop proliferation and rest in a state of dormancy and being resistant to cytotoxic drugs before “waking up” and become a highly malignant tumor recurrence, is not fully understood. Some tumors may recur after decades, a phenomenon probably also connected to cancer stem cells. The present review shows that many of these questions are related to the cell of origin as differentiated cells being long-term stimulated to proliferation.
Reference128 articles.
1. Dormancy of cutaneous melanoma;Singvogel;Cancer Cell Int,2024
2. Ultrastructural demonstration of specific secretory granules of Mastomys gastric carcinoids;Soga;Acta Med Biol (Niigata),1969
3. Argentaffin cell adenocarcinoma of the stomach: an atypical carcinoid;Soga;Cancer,1971
4. Achylia, pernicious anaemia, ECL cells and gastric carcinoids;Wilander;Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol,1980
5. Histopathology of gastric carcinoids: a survey of 42 cases;Wilander;Histopathology,1984