Melanoma: Age-Related Biological Changes Cause Tumors to Spread
Source: Cedars Sinai, April 2025
In a preclinical study, Cedars-Sinai investigators have demonstrated how age-related changes to cells surrounding a tumor make melanoma, a deadly skin cancer, more likely to spread in patients age 70 and older. Their research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Cancer Research, could lead to new therapies to help prevent melanoma metastasis.
“We set out to determine what drives melanoma metastasis in aging, and whether we can introduce changes that stop the cancer from spreading,” said Ze’ev Ronai, PhD, director of the Translational Research Institute and interim scientific director of Cedars-Sinai Cancer, and senior author of the study. “We identified a possible target for age-dependent therapies in melanoma and in other tumor types that could help us address difficult-to-treat cancers.”
Working with aged laboratory mice, investigators discovered that aging alters the activity of immune cells called macrophages in the immediate vicinity of the tumor. This supports tumor cell spreading, resulting in metastases. Their experiments found that inhibiting expression of a protein called TREM2 on the surface of macrophages prevented melanoma from spreading to the lungs of aging mice. They confirmed these results by looking at the cell composition of tumor samples from human melanoma patients age 70 and older.