The role of tumor-educated platelets in ovarian cancer: A comprehensive review and update

Dimple Patel & Padmanaban S. Suresh et al. · 2022-12-06

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Platelets have recently surfaced as critical players in cancer metastasis and the local and systemic responses to tumor growth. The emerging concept of "Tumor-educated platelets (TEPs)" comprises the exchange of biomolecules between tumor cells and platelets, thereby leading to the "education" of platelets. Increased platelet numbers have long been associated with cancer patients' tumor metastasis and poor clinical prognosis. However, it is very recently that researchers have delved deeper into the tumor-microenvironment and probed the mechanism of interactions between tumor cells and platelets. Designing strategies to target the TEPs and the communications between platelets and tumor cells can prove to be a promising breakthrough in cancer therapy. Through this review, we aim to analyze the recent developments in this field and discuss the characteristics of TEPs, focusing on ovarian cancer-associated TEPs and their characteristics, the interplay between ovarian cancer-associated TEPs and cancer cells, and the purview of TEP-targeted cancer diagnosis and therapy, including platelet biomarkers and inhibitors.
TL;DR

This review aims to analyze the recent developments in the emerging concept of "Tumor-educated platelets (TEPs), focusing on ovarian cancer-associated TEPs and their characteristics, the interplay between ovarian cancer and cancer cells, and the purview of TEP-targeted cancer diagnosis and therapy, including platelet biomarkers and inhibitors.

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Authors
Dimple Patel, Sanu Thankachan, Saraswathy Sreeram, K.P. Kavitha, Padmanaban S. Suresh