'Self-seeding' of cancer cells may play a critical role in tumor progression
Sunday, December 27, 2009 - 01:35
in Health & Medicine
Cancer progression is commonly thought of as a process involving the growth of a primary tumor followed by metastasis, in which cancer cells leave the primary tumor and spread to distant organs. A new study by researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center shows that circulating tumor cells – cancer cells that break away from a primary tumor and disseminate to other areas of the body – can also return to and grow in their tumor of origin, a newly discovered process called "self-seeding."