
Metastasis is when cancer spreads from the original tumor to other parts of the body, and it’s often the toughest part to treat. Researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering are studying how these metastatic cancer cells change and adapt to survive treatments. They found that metastatic cells can “shift” their identity to better survive, which helps explain why they become harder to stop over time.
At MSK, doctors are creating patient-based 3D models to better understand lung cancer spread and to test how different treatments work. There’s also a clinical trial exploring a drug that stops cancer cells in the brain and spine from stealing iron, which they need to grow and to avoid immune attack. This research is paving the way toward treatments that are more targeted and personalized.
For patients with late-stage or metastatic cancer, these advances offer hope for longer control of the disease and, one day, new ways to stop metastasis altogether. (Source: Memorial Sloan Kettering)