Hypoxia, a Targetable Culprit to Counter Pancreatic Cancer Resistance to Therapy

Raefa Abou Khouzam, Jean Marie Lehn, Hemma Mayr, Pierre Alain Clavien, Michael Bradley Wallace, Michel Ducreux, Perparim Limani, Salem Chouaib

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the most common type of pancreatic cancer, and it is a disease of dismal prognosis. While immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of various solid tumors, it has achieved little success in PDAC. Hypoxia within the stroma-rich tumor microenvironment is associated with resistance to therapies and promotes angiogenesis, giving rise to a chaotic and leaky vasculature that is inefficient at shuttling oxygen and nutrients. Hypoxia and its downstream effectors have been implicated in immune resistance and could be contributing to the lack of response to immunotherapy experienced by patients with PDAC. Paradoxically, increasing evidence has shown hypoxia to augment genomic instability and mutagenesis in cancer, suggesting that hypoxic tumor cells could have increased production of neoantigens that can potentially enable their clearance by cytotoxic immune cells. Strategies aimed at relieving this condition have been on the rise, and one such approach opts for normalizing the tumor vasculature to reverse hypoxia and its downstream support of tumor pathogenesis. An important consideration for the successful implementation of such strategies in the clinic is that not all PDACs are equally hypoxic, therefore hypoxia-detection approaches should be integrated to enable optimal patient selection for achieving improved patient outcomes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number1235
JournalCancers
Volume15
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2023

Keywords

  • ITPP
  • genomic instability
  • hypoxia
  • hypoxia detection
  • hypoxia signature
  • immunotherapy
  • pancreatic cancer
  • targeting hypoxia
  • tumor mutational burden
  • vascular normalization

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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