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Review Articles in 2025

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  • Macrophages can eliminate cancer cells through phagocytosis, which is tightly regulated through inhibition and activation of various phagocytic receptors. In this Review, Veillette and colleagues outline how targeting these phagocytic checkpoints could be harnessed therapeutically, address therapeutic efficacy concerns, and propose strategies to enhance therapeutic outcomes in future clinical applications.

    • André Veillette
    • Jiaxin Li
    • Zhenghai Tang
    Review Article
  • In this Review Luo, Kharas and Jaffrey outline how N6-methyladenosine (m6A) RNA modification affects RNA stability, translation, splicing and immune responses to influence cancer biology. They discuss emerging evidence on how m6A may influence cancer metabolic reprogramming and outline the challenges and opportunities of targeting m6A writers, erasers and readers for cancer therapy.

    • Hanzhi Luo
    • Michael G. Kharas
    • Samie R. Jaffrey
    Review Article
  • Concomitant medications are emerging as a modifiable prognostic factor for immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment outcomes. This Review by Stone et al. highlights the potential immunomodulatory interactions of commonly prescribed medications and supplements, and proposes strategies to make better use of this information to guide clinical care.

    • Samantha Stone
    • Jordan P. McPherson
    • Arabella Young
    Review Article
  • Tumour heterogeneity has a substantial impact on tumour progression and treatment response, yet bulk expression data obtained from clinical tumour samples obscure this complexity. Computational deconvolution methods can resolve cell-type-specific signals. This Review offers a practical guide for cancer researchers to select deconvolution methods and maximize the utility of bulk transcriptomic data.

    • Yaoyi Dai
    • Shuai Guo
    • Wenyi Wang
    Review Article
  • Macropinocytosis enables cancer cells to absorb nutrients from their environment, supporting growth and therapy resistance. In this Review, Tang, Wang, Kroemer and Kang outline its regulatory mechanisms, implications for treatment strategies and potential as a target for enhancing therapeutic efficacy in oncology.

    • Daolin Tang
    • Jiayi Wang
    • Rui Kang
    Review Article
  • Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) influence cancer initiation, progression and metastasis through immunosuppressive mechanisms within the tumour microenvironment. In this Review, Shahzad et al. highlight our recent understanding of NET biology in cancer and emphasize both the translational data available and the need for further clinical trials evaluating NETs and NET-directed therapies.

    • Muhammad H. Shahzad
    • Roni F. Rayes
    • Jonathan D. Spicer
    Review Article
  • Transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms governing T cell exhaustion substantially impact immunotherapy effectiveness. In this Review, Kang et al. outline epigenetic regulatory programmes that influence T cell differentiation fates, proposing strategies to enhance clinical outcomes and immunotherapy durability in cancer through improved understanding of T cell biology.

    • Tae Gun Kang
    • Jordan T. Johnson
    • Ben Youngblood
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Mao et al. discuss the regulation and interplay of the metabolic cell death pathways ferroptosis, disulfidptosis and cuproptosis and explore how these mechanisms can be harnessed for cancer therapies.

    • Chao Mao
    • Dadi Jiang
    • Boyi Gan
    Review Article
  • Although ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of regulated cell death, is emerging as a therapeutic vulnerability in cancer, clinical translation is hindered by context-dependent regulation, a lack of predictive biomarkers and challenges in clinical trial design. In this Review, Wahida and Conrad examine the biological basis of ferroptosis, including its immunogenic potential, and outline the necessary steps towards translating ferroptosis-based therapies into the clinic.

    • Adam Wahida
    • Marcus Conrad
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Dong and Blanpain outline our current understanding of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in cancer, which we now know is not a simple binary switch but the existence of a series of different tumour states. The authors also discuss the implications of this knowledge for pharmacologically targeting epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition to overcome therapy resistance.

    • Anqi Dong
    • Cédric Blanpain
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Kennel and Greten highlight the role of immune cells in colorectal cancer (CRC) development, progression and metastasis as well as the impact of therapies on the immune microenvironment. They emphasize the need for novel strategies to enhance immunogenicity and CRC patient stratification to improve outcomes.

    • Kilian B. Kennel
    • Florian R. Greten
    Review Article
  • Neurotoxicity impacting the central and peripheral nervous systems is a considerable adverse effect of both conventional and novel cancer therapies. In this Review, Karschnia et al. outline what is currently known about the mechanisms that underlie the clinical symptoms of central nervous system injury and peripheral neuropathy and the ongoing development of interventions to treat and prevent this unmet medical need.

    • Philipp Karschnia
    • Thomas A. Nelson
    • Jorg Dietrich
    Review Article
  • Ageing reshapes immune composition, function and regenerative capacity, with profound effects on tumour immunity, cancer progression and treatment outcomes. In this Review, Dolan and colleagues examine how age-resolved immunoprofiling, insights from ageing haematopoiesis and preclinical modelling are uncovering immune ageing dynamics and therapeutic challenges — revealing new opportunities to optimize cancer therapy across diverse age groups.

    • Melissa Dolan
    • Kendra A. Libby
    • Sandra S. McAllister
    Review Article
  • Ageing influences cancer risk through cellular and environmental changes, including the induction of cellular senescence. In this Review, Ye, Melam and Stewart highlight the role of senescent stromal cells in cancer and the therapeutic implications of this.

    • Jiayu Ye
    • Anupama Melam
    • Sheila A. Stewart
    Review Article
  • Nanoparticle surfaces can be engineered for targeted delivery of cancer therapies. In this Review, Gomerdinger, Nabar and Hammond outline the role of surface chemistry at all levels of nanoparticle trafficking, from administration route, to tissue accumulation, cellular targeting and ultimately subcellular localization. They emphasize the utility of non-covalent surface modifications for improving stealth and targeting abilities of nanoparticles for cancer.

    • Victoria F. Gomerdinger
    • Namita Nabar
    • Paula T. Hammond
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Parida and Malladi summarize the metabolic adaptations of tumour cells upon dissemination to the brain, outline the metabolic crosstalk between cancer and brain-resident cells and discuss potential strategies to target these adaptations to improve outcomes for patients with brain metastasis.

    • Pravat Kumar Parida
    • Srinivas Malladi
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Henry and DeGregori discuss the contributions of the various models and methods used to study the connection between ageing and cancer, highlighting the strengths and limitations of those models and technologies, as well as advocating for the wider adoption of age-appropriate models of cancer to improve our clinical translation of approaches to prevent and treat human cancers.

    • Curtis J. Henry
    • James DeGregori
    Review Article
  • The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) has a central role in mounting effective and durable antitumour immunity. In this Review, Hwang et al. outline how tumour-induced ER stress responses alter the function of intratumoural immune cells and the efficacy of immunotherapy, highlighting the potential of unfolded protein response-targeted interventions to improve cancer outcomes.

    • Sung-Min Hwang
    • Shiun Chang
    • Juan R. Cubillos-Ruiz
    Review Article

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