Home » Health » A research team led by the National Cancer Centre Singapore has discovered how cancer cells evade the immune system and metastasize, uncovering potential pathways for treatment. Their investigation found that cancer cells exhaust immune cells, preventing them from functioning normally and contributing to cancer growth. The team plans to identify therapies that can counter these pathways and improve treatment outcomes.

A research team led by the National Cancer Centre Singapore has discovered how cancer cells evade the immune system and metastasize, uncovering potential pathways for treatment. Their investigation found that cancer cells exhaust immune cells, preventing them from functioning normally and contributing to cancer growth. The team plans to identify therapies that can counter these pathways and improve treatment outcomes.

Cancer is one of the most concerning diseases that humanity has faced in modern times. It causes millions of deaths every year and can affect people of all ages. Cancer cells are able to evade the immune system and spread throughout the body, which makes it difficult to treat. Understanding the mechanisms behind this process of immune system evasion could help researchers develop better treatment options for cancer patients. In this article, we will delve into the ways in which cancer cells evade the immune system and the methods researchers are using to combat this deadly disease.


Researchers at the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS), Duke-NUS Medical School, KK Women and Children’s Hospital, A*STAR’s Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN), the University of Southampton and the Alan Turing Institute have discovered how cancer cells evade the immune system and metastasise in the body. Understanding how cancer evades detection and destruction by the immune system has been a focus for researchers over the last few years, with this latest discovery having implications for the development of novel strategies for cancer treatment. The immune system searches and destroys abnormal cells such as cancer cells. However, in some instances, cancer cells avoid being detected and killed by the immune system and are able to develop and spread more easily. Metastasis, a process when cancer cells break away from the primary tumour and form in other parts of the body, makes cancer harder to treat and results in poorer prognosis.

For this reason, the team decided to investigate early onset of metastasis, which typically occurs when cancer cells are detected in lymph nodes near the primary tumour. “Using a treatment to alleviate stress on immune cells, we found that immune cells were able to kill cancer cells more effectively,” said Professor Gopal Iyer, senior author of the study and Head and Senior Consultant, Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Surgery and Surgical Oncology, Singapore General Hospital and NCCS. “Still, just like some employees who are too burnt out to work properly even with a bonus, some immune cells were seen to remain exhausted even after treatment, which is how cancer may not be detected and effectively destroyed by the immune system.”

The team profiled primary and metastatic lymph node tumours from 14 patients with head and neck squamous cell cancers, using single cell RNA sequencing. They found pre-metastatic cells within the primary tumours with the capacity to metastasise to the lymph nodes. They also found that a substantial proportion of CD8+ cells, a key component of the immune system that searches and kills abnormal cells such as cancer, were ‘exhausted’ and unable to perform their protective role. This occurred when the immune cells were repeatedly exposed to cancer and unable to eliminate it.

Next, the team identified and targeted pathways that exclusively affected cancer cells, immune cells, as well as pathways that cancer cells utilise to negatively influence immune cells, and were able to prevent some cancer spread and rejuvenate immune cells. However, despite these promising results, cancer cells continued to show their ability to escape immune surveillance. Using a mouse model engrafted with pre-metastatic cancer cells, the team analysed a subgroup of CD8+ T cells expressing Midkine (MDK) receptors. One group in the model was treated with anti-PD1, while the other was a control arm.

There was an increase in exhausted MDK-receptor expressing CD8+ T cells even after anti-PD1 treatment, suggesting that the MDK-signalling pathway instigates immune suppression that undoes the effects of anti-PD1 treatment. Taken together, the results implicate MDK-signalling as a pathway which pre-metastatic cancer cells use to evade CD8-mediated immune surveillance. It also explains why some patients do not respond as well as others to anti-PD1 therapy. “Our investigations indicate that we can use multiple pathways to effectively treat cancer—by targeting cancer cells, the immune system and using existing therapies to counter immune system evasion by cancer cells. We know we need an increased arsenal of weapons to use against cancer and have to put it together to improve treatment outcomes,” said Professor Iyer, who is also head of the Division of Medical Sciences at NCCS.

To counter CD8+ T cells expressing MDK-receptors, in addition to exploiting the targets found in their research, the team plans to identify therapies that they can combine with anti-PD1 therapy. This promising research will help in developing novel cancer therapies, and illustrates how science will continue to provide solutions to make a difference in the fight against cancer.

The study has been published in Nature Communications.


In conclusion, cancer is a multifaceted and highly elusive disease that continues to challenge scientists and medical practitioners alike. Despite significant strides in cancer research and treatment, the ability of tumors to evade immune system detection and spread remains a persistent obstacle. By gaining a deeper understanding of the biology of cancer and the immune system, researchers may be able to develop more effective ways to prevent, detect, and treat cancer. In the meantime, it is imperative that we continue to support and fund cancer research efforts to ultimately improve the lives of those affected by this devastating disease.

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