Inflammatory mediators as surrogates of malignancy

J Pak Med Assoc. 2022 Nov;72(11):2259-2263. doi: 10.47391/JPMA.4738.

Abstract

Inflammation related to cancer occurs in the cellular vicinity of the tumour and is involved with predictions related to the course of disease and survival prognosis in varioua malignancies. These inflammatory markers affect different phases of tumourigenesis, i.e. carcinogenesis, tumour expansion, lymphovascular invasion, and distant metastasis, and, as a result, tumour cells can activate immune mediators and cells directly and/or chemokines as well as prostaglandins. Numbers of circulating different blood cells, i.e. lymphocytes, platelets, neutrophils and levels of plasma proteins, like C-reactive protein and interleukins that are components of inflammatory responses, are hallmarks of pathways leading to tumourigenesis. Thus, they can provide vital information in stratifying patients according to the risk and precisely targeted clinical care and outcome in malignancies. The current narrartive review was planned to discuss the role of platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio alongside the use of systemic immune inflammation index as the inflammatory mediators of malignancies along with overview of their role in different studies. It was also planned to recommend what the future studies should should aim at, including multiple risk factors, exposures and inflammatory profiles and as well as their combined interactions, for a better understanding of the role of the inflammatory mediators in malignancy.

Keywords: Immune Markers, Inflammatory markers, Carcinoma, Metastatic Cancer, Cancer Survival..

MeSH terms

  • Blood Platelets
  • Carcinogenesis
  • Humans
  • Inflammation
  • Inflammation Mediators*
  • Lymphocyte Count
  • Neoplasms*
  • Neutrophils
  • Prognosis

Substances

  • Inflammation Mediators