Cutting off blood flow can
prematurely age the bone marrow, weakening the immune system’s ability to fight
cancer, according to a new study from NYU Langone Health.
Published online August 19 in JACC-CardioOncology, the study showed that peripheral
ischemia-restricted blood flow in the arteries in the legs-caused breast tumors
in mice to grow at double the rate seen in mice without restricted flow. These
findings build on a 2020 study from the same team that found ischemia during a
heart attack to have the same effect.
Ischemia occurs when fatty deposits,
such as cholesterol, accumulate in artery walls, leading to inflammation and
clotting that restrict the flow of oxygen-rich blood. When this happens in the
legs, it causes peripheral artery disease, which affects millions of Americans,
and can increase the risk of heart attack or stroke.
“Our study shows that impaired blood
flow drives cancer growth regardless of where it happens in the body,” says
corresponding author Kathryn J. Moore, PhD, the Jean and David Blechman
Professor of Cardiology in the Department of Medicine, Leon H. Charney Division
of Cardiology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine. “This link between peripheral
artery disease and breast cancer growth underscores the critical importance of
addressing metabolic and vascular risk factors as part of a comprehensive
cancer treatment strategy.”
Importantly, the research team found
that restricted blood flow triggers a shift toward immune cell populations that
cannot efficiently fight infections and cancer, mirroring changes seen with
aging.
Systemic
Skewing
To examine the mechanisms behind the
link between cardiovascular disease and cancer growth, the study authors
developed a mouse model with breast tumors and induced temporary ischemia in
one hind limb. The team then compared cancer growth in mice with and without
impaired blood flow.
Their findings build on the nature of
the immune system, which evolved to attack invading bacteria and viruses, and
under normal conditions, to detect and eliminate cancer cells. These protective
functions rely on stem cell reserves in the bone marrow, which can be activated
as needed to produce key white blood cell populations throughout life.
Normally, the immune system responds to
injury or infection by ramping up inflammation to eliminate threats, then
scaling back to avoid harm to healthy tissue. This balance is maintained by a
mix of immune cells that either activate or suppress inflammation. The
researchers found that reduced blood flow disrupts this equilibrium. It
reprograms stem cells in the bone marrow to favor the production of “myeloid”
immune cells (monocytes, macrophages, neutrophils) that dampen immune
responses, while reducing output of lymphocytes like T cells that help to mount
strong anti-tumor responses.
The local environment within tumors
showed a similar shift, accumulating more immune-suppressive cells- including
Ly6Chi monocytes, M2-like F4/80+ MHCIIlo macrophages, and regulatory T cells –
that shield cancer from immune attack.
Further experiments showed that these
immune changes were long-lasting. Ischemia not only altered the expression of
hundreds of genes, shifting immune cells into a more cancer-tolerant state, but
also reorganized the structure of chromatin-the protein scaffolding that
controls access to DNA-making it harder for immune cells to activate genes
involved in fighting cancer.
“Our results reveal a direct mechanism
by which ischemia drives cancer growth, reprogramming stem cells in ways that
resemble aging and promote immune tolerance,” says first author Alexandra
Newman, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar in Dr. Moore’s lab. “These findings open
the door to new strategies in cancer prevention and treatment, like earlier
cancer screening for patients with peripheral artery disease and using
inflammation-modulating therapies to counter these effects.”
Moving forward, the research team hopes
to help design clinical studies that evaluate whether existing
inflammation-targeted therapies can counter post-ischemic changes driving tumor
growth.
Source: https://sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250910000311.htm
Journal article: https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jaccao.2025.05.016
Source: Blocked blood flow makes cancer grow faster – Scents of Science
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