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Why cancer most frequently spreads to the liver

6 Mar 2019
Why cancer most frequently spreads to the liver

When cancer spreads to another organ, it most commonly moves to the liver, and now researchers at the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania say they know why.

A new study, published today in Nature, shows hepatocytes - the chief functional cells of the liver - are at the centre of a chain reaction that makes it particularly susceptible to cancer cells.

These hepatocytes respond to inflammation by activating a protein called STAT3, which in turn increases their production of other proteins called SAA, which then remodel the liver and create the "soil" needed for cancer cells to "seed".

The researchers show that stopping this process by using antibodies that block IL-6 - the inflammatory signal that drives this chain reaction - can limit the potential of cancer to spread to the liver.

"The seed-and-soil hypothesis is well-recognised, but our research now shows that hepatocytes are the major orchestrators of this process," said senior author Gregory L. Beatty, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of Haematology-Oncology at Penn's Perelman School of Medicine. Jae W. Lee, an MD/PhD candidate in Beatty's laboratory, is the lead author.

For this study, the team first used mouse models of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), the most common type of pancreatic cancer and currently the third leading cause of cancer death in the United States.

They found that nearly all hepatocytes showed STAT3 activation in mice with cancer, compared to less than two percent of hepatocytes in mice without tumours.

They then partnered with investigators at the Mayo Clinic Arizona and other Penn colleagues to show that this same biology could be seen in patients with pancreatic cancer as well colon and lung cancer.

Genetically deleting STAT3 only in hepatocytes effectively blocked the increased susceptibility of the liver to cancer seeding in mice.

The team collaborated further with investigators at the University of Kentucky to show that IL-6 controls STAT3 signalling in these cells and instructs hepatocytes to make SAA, which acts as an alarm to attract inflammatory cells and initiate a fibrotic reaction that together establish the "soil."

"The liver is an important sensor in the body," Lee said. "We show that hepatocytes sense inflammation and respond in a structured way that cancer uses to help it spread."

The study also found that IL-6 drives changes in the liver whether there's a tumour present or not, implying that any condition associated with increased IL-6 levels - such as obesity or cardiovascular disease, among others - could affect the liver's receptiveness to cancer.

Researchers say this provides evidence that therapies which target hepatocytes may be able to prevent cancer from spreading to the liver, a major cause of cancer mortality.

Source: University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine