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- Title
Chronic stress promotes an immunologic inflammatory state and head and neck cancer growth in a humanized murine model.
- Authors
Zenga, Joseph; Awan, Musaddiq J.; Frei, Anne; Petrie, Ellie; Sharma, Guru Prasad; Shreenivas, Aditya; Shukla, Monica; Himburg, Heather A.
- Abstract
Background: Despite the importance of immune response and environmental stress on head and neck cancer (HNC) outcomes, no current pre‐clinical stress model includes a humanized immune system. Methods: We investigated the effects of chronic stress induced by social isolation on tumor growth and human immune response in subcutaneous HNC tumors grown in NSG‐SGM3 mice engrafted with a human immune system. Results: Tumor growth (p < 0.0001) and lung metastases (p = 0.035) were increased in socially isolated versus control animals. Chronic stress increased intra‐tumoral CD4+ T‐cell infiltrate (p = 0.005), plasma SDF‐1 (p < 0.0001) expression, and led to tumor cell dedifferentiation toward a cancer stem cell phenotype (CD44+/ALDHhigh, p = 0.025). Conclusions: Chronic stress induced immunophenotypic changes, increased tumor growth, and metastasis in HNC in a murine model with a humanized immune system. This model system may provide further insight into the immunologic and oncologic impact of chronic stress on patients with HNC.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL stress; INFLAMMATION; TUMOR growth; HEADS of state; CANCER stem cells
- Publication
Head & Neck, 2022, Vol 44, Issue 6, p1324
- ISSN
1043-3074
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/hed.27028