Phenotypic variation modulates the growth dynamics and response to radiotherapy of solid tumours under normoxia and hypoxia
Giulia L. Celora, Helen M. Byrne, Christos Zois, Panos G. Kevrekidis

TL;DR
This study develops a phenotype-structured model to understand how oxygen levels influence tumour growth, stemness, and radiotherapy response, revealing hypoxia's role in promoting radio-resistance and tumour recurrence.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel phenotype-structured model linking oxygen levels, cell differentiation, and treatment response in solid tumours, highlighting hypoxia's impact on stemness and therapy resistance.
Findings
Hypoxia promotes cancer stem cell dominance and radio-resistance.
Normoxia leads to tumour differentiation and potential extinction.
Radiation-induced hypoxia can cause tumour regrowth and complex dynamics.
Abstract
In cancer, treatment failure and disease recurrence have been associated with small subpopulations of cancer cells with a stem-like phenotype. In this paper, we develop and investigate a phenotype-structured model of solid tumour growth in which cells are structured by a stemness level, which varies continuously between stem-like and terminally differentiated behaviours. Cell evolution is driven by proliferation and apoptosis, as well as advection and diffusion with respect to the stemness structure variable. We use the model to investigate how the environment, in particular oxygen levels, affects the tumour's population dynamics and composition, and its response to radiotherapy. We use a combination of numerical and analytical techniques to quantify how under physiological oxygen levels the cells evolve to a differentiated phenotype and under low oxygen level (i.e., hypoxia) they…
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Taxonomy
MethodsDiffusion
