Periampullary cancer and neurological interactions: current understanding and future research directions

Front Oncol. 2024 Mar 19:14:1370111. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2024.1370111. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Periampullary cancer is a malignant tumor occurring around the ampullary region of the liver and pancreas, encompassing a variety of tissue types and sharing numerous biological characteristics, including interactions with the nervous system. The nervous system plays a crucial role in regulating organ development, maintaining physiological equilibrium, and ensuring life process plasticity, a role that is equally pivotal in oncology. Investigations into nerve-tumor interactions have unveiled their key part in controlling cancer progression, inhibiting anti-tumor immune responses, facilitating invasion and metastasis, and triggering neuropathic pain. Despite many mechanisms by which nerve fibers contribute to cancer advancement still being incompletely understood, the growing emphasis on the significance of nerves within the tumor microenvironment in recent years has set the stage for the development of groundbreaking therapies. This includes combining current neuroactive medications with established therapeutic protocols. This review centers on the mechanisms of Periampullary cancer's interactions with nerves, the influence of various types of nerve innervation on cancer evolution, and outlines the horizons for ongoing and forthcoming research.

Keywords: ampulla of Vater; nerve; pancreatic cancer; periampullary cancer; perineural invasion.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was funded by Shanxi Province “136” Revitalization Medical Project Construction Funds(No. 2019XY002),and Innovative Projects in Graduate Education in Shanxi Province funds(No. 2022Y389).