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Mechanical forces: The missing link between idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancer.

Patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) have a high risk of developing lung cancer compared with the general population. The morbidity of lung cancer in IPF patient ranges from 3% to 22%, and in some cases exceeds 50%, and these patients have a reduced survival time. However, the mechanisms through which IPF increases the morbidity and mortality in lung cancer remain unclear. By carefully analyzing the pathological features of these two diseases, we uncovered that, first, similar to IPF, lung carcinomas are more frequently found in the peripheral area of the lungs and, second, lung cancers tend to develop from the honeycomb areas in IPF. In accordance with the above pathological features, due to the spatial location, the peripheral areas of the lung experience a high stretch force because the average distance between adjacent alveolar cells in this area tends to be larger than that at the central lung when inflated; furthermore, the honeycomb areas, comprised of condensed fibrous tissue, are characterized by increased stiffness. Both of these pathological features of lung cancer and IPF are coincidentally related to abnormal mechanical forces (stretch and tissue stiffness). Therefore, we believe that the aberrant mechanical forces that are generated in the lung with IPF may contribute to the onset and progression of lung cancer. In this review, we discuss the possible effects of mechanical forces that are generated in IPF on the initiation and progression of lung cancer from the perspective of the hallmarks of cancer, including proliferation, metastasis, angiogenesis, cancer stem cells, immunology, epigenetics, and metabolism, so as to advance our understanding of the pathogenesis of IPF-related lung cancer and to harness these concepts for lung cancer mechanotherapies.

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