Research Shows that Cancer Cells Can Poison Normal Cells

Team finds that cancer cells can actually cause neighboring normal cells to become cancerous

Written byUniversity of Delaware
| 2 min read
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Dec. 2, 2015--Cancer cells are continuously produced in our bodies, where most of them are recognized by our immune systems and destroyed. Some, however, escape this innate surveillance system and find a place to survive and grow. 

Several factors expelled by tumor cells are concentrated in the area immediately surrounding the tumor, called the tumor microenvironment. While it is established that these factors support and enhance cancer cell growth and multiplication, it was not known whether these factors influence neighboring normal cells.

Related article: Learning from Extinction: New Insights on Controlling Cancer

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