Publications
Adipose, Bone, and Myeloma: Contributions from the Microenvironment
Abstract
Researchers globally are working towards finding a cure for multiple myeloma (MM), a destructive blood cancer diagnosed yearly in ~750,000 people worldwide (Podar et al. in Expert Opin Emerg Drugs 14:99-127, 2009). Although MM targets multiple organ systems, it is the devastating skeletal destruction experienced by over 90 % of patients that often most severely impacts patient morbidity, pain, and quality of life. Preventing bone disease is therefore a priority in MM treatment, and understanding how and why myeloma cells target the bone marrow (BM) is fundamental to this process. This review focuses on a key area of MM research: the contributions of the bone microenvironment to disease origins, progression, and drug resistance. We describe some of the key cell types in the BM niche: osteoclasts, osteoblasts, osteocytes, adipocytes, and mesenchymal stem cells. We then focus on how these key cellular players are, or could be, regulating a range of disease-related processes spanning MM growth, drug resistance, and bone disease (including osteolysis, fracture, and hypercalcemia). We summarize the literature regarding MM-bone cell and MM-adipocyte relationships and subsequent phenotypic changes or adaptations in MM cells, with the aim of providing a deeper understanding of how myeloma cells grow in the skeleton to cause bone destruction. We identify avenues and therapies that intervene in these networks to stop tumor growth and/or induce bone regeneration. Overall, we aim to illustrate how novel therapeutic target molecules, proteins, and cellular mediators may offer new avenues to attack this disease while reviewing currently utilized therapies.
| Type | Journal |
|---|---|
| ISBN | 1432-0827 (Electronic) 0171-967X (Linking) |
| Authors | McDonald, M. M.; Fairfield, H.; Falank, C.; Reagan, M. R. |
| Responsible Garvan Author | Dr Michelle McDonald |
| Publisher Name | CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL |
| Published Date | 2017-05-10 |
| Published Volume | 100 |
| Published Issue | 5 |
| Published Pages | 433-448 |
| Status | Published in-print |
| DOI | 10.1007/s00223-016-0162-2 |
| URL link to publisher's version | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27343063 |