Abstract

Bone-metastatic prostate cancer is common in men with recurrent castrate-resistant disease. To date, therapeutic focus has largely revolved around androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and chemotherapy. While second-generation ADTs and combination ADT/chemotherapy approaches have been successful in extending overall survival, the disease remains incurable. It is clear that molecular and cellular components of the cancer-bone microenvironment contribute to the disease progression and potentially to the emergence of therapy resistance. In bone, metastatic prostate cancer cells manipulate bone-forming osteoblasts and bone-resorbing osteoclasts to produce growth and survival factors. While osteoclast-targeted therapies such as bisphosphonates have improved quality of life, emerging data have defined important roles for additional cells of the bone microenvironment, including macrophages and T cells. Disappointingly, early clinical trials with checkpoint blockade inhibitors geared at promoting cytotoxic T cell response have not proved as promising for prostate cancer compared to other solid malignancies. Macrophages, including bone-resident osteomacs, are a major component of the bone marrow and play key roles in coordinating normal bone remodeling and injury repair. The role for anti-inflammatory macrophages in the progression of primary prostate cancer is well established yet relatively little is known about macrophages in the context of bone-metastatic prostate cancer. The focus of the current review is to summarize our knowledge of macrophage contribution to normal bone remodeling and prostate-to-bone metastasis, while also considering the impact of standard of care and targeted therapies on macrophage behavior in the tumor-bone microenvironment.

Highlights

  • In 2018 alone, approximately 28,000 deaths from prostate cancer are predicted [1]

  • These studies indicate that osteomacs can direct the transition between osteolysis and osteogenesis by directly modulating the expansion and activity of osteoclasts and osteoblasts for repair in the event of bone injury [46]. These studies demonstrate the complex roles of bone-resident macrophages in bone remodeling [54, 55]. How they contribute to the progression of bone-metastatic prostate cancer and respond to applied therapies has not been fully elucidated at this juncture

  • Macrophages represent a large component of the immune infiltrate, and depending on their polarization state, can contribute to the progression of the disease

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Summary

Multifaceted Roles for Macrophages in Prostate Cancer Skeletal Metastasis

Center, United States Robin Mark Howard Rumney, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom. Bone-metastatic prostate cancer is common in men with recurrent castrate-resistant disease. It is clear that molecular and cellular components of the cancer-bone microenvironment contribute to the disease progression and potentially to the emergence of therapy resistance. Metastatic prostate cancer cells manipulate bone-forming osteoblasts and bone-resorbing osteoclasts to produce growth and survival factors. While osteoclast-targeted therapies such as bisphosphonates have improved quality of life, emerging data have defined important roles for additional cells of the bone microenvironment, including macrophages and T cells. The focus of the current review is to summarize our knowledge of macrophage contribution to normal bone remodeling and prostate-to-bone metastasis, while considering the impact of standard of care and targeted therapies on macrophage behavior in the tumor-bone microenvironment

INTRODUCTION
MACROPHAGE FUNCTION IN TISSUE HOMEOSTASIS
MACROPHAGE ROLES IN BONE REMODELING AND INJURY REPAIR
MACROPHAGES PROMOTE PRIMARY PROSTATE CANCER PROGRESSION
TAMs IN METASTATIC CASCADE OF PROSTATE CANCER
MACROPHAGES IN THE PROGRESSION OF ESTABLISHED PROSTATE TO BONE METASTASES
Findings
CONCLUSION
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