Abstract

The dynamics of tumor growth and associated events cover multiple time and spatial scales, generally including extracellular, cellular and intracellular modifications. The main goal of this study is to model the biological and physical behavior of tumor evolution in presence of normal healthy tissue, considering a variety of events involved in the process. These include hyper and hypoactivation of signaling pathways during tumor growth, vessels’ growth, intratumoral vascularization and competition of cancer cells with healthy host tissue. The work addresses two distinctive phases in tumor development—the avascular and vascular phases—and in each stage two cases are considered—with and without normal healthy cells. The tumor growth rate increases considerably as closed vessel loops (anastomoses) form around the tumor cells resulting from tumor induced vascularization. When taking into account the host tissue around the tumor, the results show that competition between normal cells and cancer cells leads to the formation of a hypoxic tumor core within a relatively short period of time. Moreover, a dense intratumoral vascular network is formed throughout the entire lesion as a sign of a high malignancy grade, which is consistent with reported experimental data for several types of solid carcinomas. In comparison with other mathematical models of tumor development, in this work we introduce a multiscale simulation that models the cellular interactions and cell behavior as a consequence of the activation of oncogenes and deactivation of gene signaling pathways within each cell. Simulating a therapy that blocks relevant signaling pathways results in the prevention of further tumor growth and leads to an expressive decrease in its size (82% in the simulation).

Highlights

  • Tumor development leads to an accumulation of abnormal cells with high capacity to proliferate and resist apoptosis

  • The full range of events involved in tumor development are affected by continuous interactions with the extracellular matrix (ECM) components and alterations in signaling pathways that regulate cell adhesion [45]

  • Integrins are cell surface receptors of various ECM proteins involved in cell-adhesion and drive cells binding to the ECM

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Summary

Introduction

Tumor development leads to an accumulation of abnormal cells with high capacity to proliferate and resist apoptosis. Solid tumors grow in an avascular mode. Due to the limitation of nutrient diffusion from surrounding vessels, the cells in the tumor core suffer hypoxia. In order to promote cell survival in response to this new condition, cells express hypoxiainducible factor-1 (HIF-1) which up-regulates pro-angiogenic factors, including the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), triggering tumor vascularization (Fig 1). Tumors in the vascular growth phase are more likely to be aggressive since they have easier access to nearby blood vessels, and the metastasis process is facilitated. Tumor metastatic progression often occurs during the avascular growth in already highly vascularized organs such as brain, lung, liver and lymph nodes [1]

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