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Tumor Cell Stemness and Stromal Cell Features Contribute to Oral Cancer Outcome Disparity in Black Americans.

Authors :
Mirshahidi, Saied
Yuan, Isabella J.
Chen, Zhong
Simental, Alfred
Lee, Steve C.
Andrade Filho, Pedro A.
Murry, Thomas
Zeng, Feng
Duerksen-Hughes, Penelope
Wang, Charles
Yuan, Xiangpeng
Source :
Cancers. Aug2024, Vol. 16 Issue 15, p2730. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Head and neck cancer disparities in outcomes for Black Americans have been well recognized. However, the specific drivers of the inferior outcomes remain poorly understood. We investigated the biologic features of patient oral cancers and performed a follow-up study of the patient post-surgery recurrences and metastases aiming to explore potential mechanisms that might underpin the poorer outcomes among Black American patients. It was found that high levels of tumor stemness and tumor-promoting stromal characteristics were linked to patient recurrence and metastasis. There were more cases of Black American than White American exhibiting high stemness traits and strong tumor-promoting stromal features associated with tumor recurrences and metastases, although the investigated cases displayed comparable clinical diagnoses. Our findings revealed that the differences in tumor stemness and stromal property among cancers with similar diagnoses contribute to patient outcome disparities. Black Americans (BAs) with head and neck cancer (HNC) have worse survival outcomes compared to the White patients. While HNC disparities in patient outcomes for BAs have been well recognized, the specific drivers of the inferior outcomes remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the biologic features of patient tumor specimens obtained during the surgical treatment of oral cancers and performed a follow-up study of the patients' post-surgery recurrences and metastases with the aim to explore whether tumor biologic features could be associated with the poorer outcomes among BA patients compared with White American (WA) patients. We examined the tumor stemness traits and stromal properties as well as the post-surgery recurrence and metastasis of oral cancers among BA and WA patients. It was found that high levels of tumor self-renewal, invasion, tumorigenesis, metastasis, and tumor-promoting stromal characteristics were linked to post-surgery recurrence and metastasis. There were more BA than WA patients demonstrating high stemness traits and strong tumor-promoting stromal features in association with post-surgery tumor recurrences and metastases, although the investigated cases displayed clinically comparable TNM stages and histological grades. These findings demonstrated that the differences in tumor stemness and stromal property among cancers with comparable clinical diagnoses contribute to the outcome disparity in HNCs. More research is needed to understand the genetic and molecular basis of the biologic characteristics underlying the inferior outcomes among BA patients, so that targeting strategies can be developed to reduce HNC disparity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
15
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178952349
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16152730