Unmasking the role of tumor microenvironment in the advanced stage of cancer treatment to mitigate risks during chemotherapy.
The complexity of the tumor microenvironment in advanced-stage cancer critically diminishes the activity of chemotherapy, often reducing its efficacy to a point where the inherent risks become clinica
APA
Kumari A, Meher N, et al. (2026). Unmasking the role of tumor microenvironment in the advanced stage of cancer treatment to mitigate risks during chemotherapy.. Biochemical pharmacology, 246, 117754. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2026.117754
MLA
Kumari A, et al.. "Unmasking the role of tumor microenvironment in the advanced stage of cancer treatment to mitigate risks during chemotherapy.." Biochemical pharmacology, vol. 246, 2026, pp. 117754.
PMID
41611133
Abstract
The complexity of the tumor microenvironment in advanced-stage cancer critically diminishes the activity of chemotherapy, often reducing its efficacy to a point where the inherent risks become clinically unwarranted. This review "unmasks" the tumor microenvironment as a sophisticated barrier system driven primarily by hypoxia, i.e. severe oxygen deprivation. Hypoxia stabilizes master-regulators, including hypoxia-inducible factor-1α, which actively induce multidrug resistance. Specifically, hypoxia-inducible factor-1α orchestrates drug expulsion from the cancer cell via efflux pumps and enhances cellular repair of drug-induced DNA damage, functionally neutralizing cytotoxic agents. This resistance is compounded by tumor heterogeneity, which promotes the selection of aggressive, drug-evading subclones, and by hypoxia-induced degradation of the major histocompatibility complex class I, rendering cancer cells invisible to the immune system. Translational challenges, such as the mixed efficacy of hypoxia-activated prodrugs, highlight the urgent need for robust diagnostics to accurately verify tumor microenvironment conditions. To restore therapeutic efficacy and mitigate the risks of ineffective treatments, a paradigm shift is necessary: integrating tumor microenvironment-targeted agents (such as hypoxia-inducible factor-2α inhibitors) with adaptive dosing strategies guided by real-time molecular monitoring, including liquid biopsies and hypoxia-PET imaging. This integrated strategy is essential for achieving durable patient outcomes.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Tumor Microenvironment; Neoplasms; Antineoplastic Agents; Animals; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; Neoplasm Staging