Tumor-induced neoneurogenesis and perineural tumor growth: a mathematical approach
Arianna Bianchi, Konstantinos Syrigos, Georgios Lolas

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical model to understand how tumors induce nerve growth and how stress-related factors influence tumor progression, providing insights into potential therapeutic strategies targeting tumor-nerve interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel differential equations model to simulate tumor-induced neoneurogenesis and explores the impact of stress hormones on tumor growth and spread.
Findings
Tumors promote nerve formation and elongation around themselves.
High levels of NGF and AGMs are associated with tumors.
Stress hormones like norepinephrine enhance tumor development.
Abstract
Primary tumors infrequently lead to demise of cancer patients; instead, mortality and a significant degree of morbidity result from the growth of secondary tumors in distant organs (metastasis). It is well-known that malignant tumors induce the formation of a lymphatic and a blood vascular network around themselves. A similar but far less studied process occurs in relation to the nervous system and is referred to as \emph{neoneurogenesis}; in fact, recent studies have demonstrated that tumors initiate their own innervation. However, the relationship between tumor progression and the nervous system is still poorly understood. This process is most likely regulated by a multitude of factors in the tumor-nerve microenvironment and it is therefore important to study the interactions between the nervous system and tumor cells through mathematical/computational modelling: this may reveal the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer, Stress, Anesthesia, and Immune Response · Axon Guidance and Neuronal Signaling · Cancer Cells and Metastasis
