Tumor Progression - Cancer's Creepy Crawl
- Definition: Stepwise accumulation of (epi)genetic changes; results in ↑malignancy & ↑heterogeneity.
- Clonal Evolution: Darwinian selection of "fittest" subclones with growth/survival advantages.
- Initial tumor often monoclonal; genetic instability fuels diversification.
- Tumor Heterogeneity: Diverse cell populations within a single tumor.
- Implications: varied metastatic potential, drug resistance, treatment failure.
- Key Processes Acquired:
- Sustained angiogenesis (e.g., VEGF).
- Local invasion (e.g., MMPs).
- Metastasis.

⭐ Tumor progression is not always linear; some tumors may acquire metastatic ability early, even before significant local growth (e.g., "born to be bad" phenotype).
Local Invasion - Breaking Down Walls
Tumors breach basement membranes and invade surrounding stroma, a critical step before metastasis. Key mechanisms include:
- Detachment ("Loosening of cells"):
- ↓ E-cadherin expression (loss of cell-cell adhesion).
- Cadherin switching (e.g., N-cadherin ↑).
- Degradation of Extracellular Matrix (ECM):
- Secretion of proteolytic enzymes:
- Matrix Metalloproteinases (MMPs) e.g., MMP-2, MMP-9.
- Cathepsin D.
- Loss of basement membrane integrity.
- Secretion of proteolytic enzymes:
- Attachment to ECM Components:
- Changes in integrin expression (e.g., αvβ3 integrin ↑).
- Binding to fibronectin, laminin.
- Migration & Locomotion:
- Propulsion through degraded matrix.
- Stimulated by autocrine motility factors & ECM cleavage products.
📌 Mnemonic: Dogs Dig Awful Messes (Detachment, Degradation, Attachment, Migration)
⭐ Downregulation of E-cadherin is a key event in promoting local invasion and is often associated with epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT).

Metastatic Cascade - The Great Journey
- Highly complex, multi-step, and notably inefficient process where cancer cells disseminate from the primary tumor to establish secondary tumors at distant sites.
- Key Stages:
- Liberation & Local Invasion: ↓E-cadherin (cell adhesion loss). ECM degradation by MMPs, cathepsins. Detachment.
- Intravasation: Penetration into lymphatic/blood vessels.
- Survival in Circulation: Evade immune attack (e.g., platelet shield), resist anoikis, form tumor emboli.
- Extravasation & Homing: Adhere to endothelium, exit vessel. Organ-specific tropism (e.g., prostate cancer to bone).
- Colonization & Angiogenesis: Micrometastasis forms. VEGF is crucial, driving angiogenesis for macrometastasis growth.

⭐ Paget's "Seed and Soil" hypothesis (1889) explains organotropism: "seeds" (tumor cells) colonize compatible "soil" (organ microenvironments).
Organ Tropism & Impact - Finding a Niche
- Organ Tropism: Metastases favor specific organs; "Seed and Soil" hypothesis (Paget).
- Mechanisms:
- Anatomical routes: Blood/lymph flow (e.g., portal vein → liver).
- Molecular matchmaking:
- Chemokine axes: e.g., CXCR4-CXCL12.
- Adhesion molecules: Tumor-endothelial interactions.
- Supportive microenvironment ("soil"): Growth factors, ECM.
- Common Patterns:
- Prostate → Bone (osteoblastic).
- Breast, Lung, Kidney, Thyroid → Bone (often osteolytic/mixed).
- 📌 Bone mets: PB KTL (Prostate, Breast, Kidney, Thyroid, Lung).
- Colon, Stomach, Pancreas → Liver.
- Lung, Breast → Brain, Adrenals.
⭐ Regional lymph nodes are the most common metastatic site; distant spread dictates prognosis.
- Clinical Impact:
- Determines prognosis & treatment.
- Metastasis is the primary cause of cancer death.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Tumor progression: driven by genetic instability and clonal selection.
- Metastasis: spread to distant sites, the hallmark of malignancy.
- Metastatic cascade: invasion (ECM degradation), intravasation, circulation, extravasation, colonization.
- EMT (↓E-cadherin) is crucial for invasion and metastasis.
- Angiogenesis is essential for tumor growth >1-2 mm and metastasis.
- Common sites: lymph nodes (carcinomas), liver, lungs, bone.
- "Seed and soil" hypothesis explains organ-specific metastasis.
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