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Esraa Al Dujaily

University of Leicester

Publishes on Ferroptosis and cancer prognosis, Cancer, Lipids, and Metabolism, Cancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism. 2 papers and 25 citations.

2Publications
25Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Reduced Protumorigenic Tumor-Associated Macrophages With Statin Use in Premalignant Human Lung Adenocarcinoma
Esraa Al Dujaily, Juvenal Baena, Madhumita Das et al.|JNCI Cancer Spectrum|2019
Cited by 16Open Access

Abstract Background Statins have anticancer properties by acting as competitive inhibitors of the mevalonate pathway. They also have anti-inflammatory activity, but their role in suppressing inflammation in a cancer context has not been investigated to date. Methods We have analyzed the relationship between statin use and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in a cohort of 262 surgically resected primary human lung adenocarcinomas. TAMs were evaluated by multiplex immunostaining for the CD68 pan-TAM marker and the CD163 protumorigenic TAM marker followed by digital slide scanning and partially automated quantitation. Links between statin use and tumor stage, virulence, and cancer-specific survival were also investigated in a wider cohort of 958 lung adenocarcinoma cases. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results We found a statin dose-dependent reduction in protumorigenic TAMs (CD68+CD163+) in both stromal (P = .021) and parenchymal (P = .003) compartments within regions of in situ tumor growth, but this association was lost in invasive regions. No statistically significant relationship between statin use and tumor stage was observed, but there was a statin dose-dependent shift towards lower histological grade as assessed by growth pattern (P = .028). However, statin use was a predictor of slightly worse cancer-specific survival (P = .032), even after accounting for prognostic variables in a multivariable Cox proportional hazards survival model (hazard ratio = 1.38, 95% confidence interval = 1.04 to 1.84). Conclusions Statin use is associated with reduced numbers of protumorigenic TAMs within preinvasive lung adenocarcinoma and is related to reduced tumor invasiveness, suggesting a chemo-preventive effect in early tumor development. However, invasive disease is resistant to these effects, and no beneficial relationship between statin use and patient outcome is observed.

Statins mediate anti- and pro-tumourigenic functions by remodelling the tumour microenvironment
Tamihiro Kamata, Esraa Al Dujaily, Salwa Alhamad et al.|Disease Models & Mechanisms|2021
Cited by 9Open Access

Anti-cancer properties of statins are controversial and possibly context dependent. Recent pathology/epidemiology studies of human lung adenocarcinoma showed reduced pro-tumourigenic macrophages associated with a shift to lower-grade tumours amongst statin users but, paradoxically, worse survival compared with that of non-users. To investigate the mechanisms involved, we have characterised mouse lung adenoma/adenocarcinoma models treated with atorvastatin. Here, we show that atorvastatin suppresses premalignant disease by inhibiting the recruitment of pro-tumourigenic macrophages to the tumour microenvironment, manifested in part by suppression of Rac-mediated CCR1 ligand secretion. However, prolonged atorvastatin treatment leads to drug resistance and progression of lung adenomas into invasive disease. Pathological progression is not driven by acquisition of additional driver mutations or immunoediting/evasion but is associated with stromal changes including the development of desmoplastic stroma containing Gr1+ myeloid cells and tertiary lymphoid structures. These findings show that any chemopreventive functions of atorvastatin in lung adenocarcinoma are overridden by stromal remodelling in the long term, thus providing mechanistic insight into the poor survival of lung adenocarcinoma patients with statin use.