Cancer Pathophysiology
A section of Cancers (ISSN 2072-6694).
Section Information
The fundamental abnormality driving the onset and progression of all cancer types is the dysregulated proliferation of cells that grow and divide in an uncontrolled manner, invade normal tissues and organs, and ultimately disseminate throughout the body. This loss of growth control arises from the progressive accumulation of abnormalities across diverse regulatory systems, producing the typical hallmarks that distinguish malignant from healthy cells.
Historically, cancer has been conceptualized as a multistep, Darwinian process driven by genetic mutations and selection of clones with increasing capacities for proliferation, survival, invasion, and metastasis. Tumor initiation is thought to stem from an initial genetic alteration that disrupts normal proliferation and produces a clonally derived population of aberrant cells. Subsequent genetic and functional heterogeneity emerge as additional mutations accumulate during tumor progression, fueling continuous clonal selection and adaptation.
More recent discoveries have expanded this paradigm. Epigenetic dysregulation, chromatin remodeling, and alterations in the noncoding RNA landscape (including microRNAs, lncRNAs, circRNAs, and others) have been shown to significantly impact both tumor initiation and progression. Moreover, modern technological advances—including single-cell profiling, spatial transcriptomics, proteogenomics, and high-resolution imaging—have revealed new layers of complexity in tumor ecosystems, highlighting previously unrecognized drivers of cancer behavior.
This section of Cancers seeks to publish high-quality contributions that address the full spectrum of cancer pathophysiology. We invite submissions of original research articles, systematic and narrative reviews, and communications that report novel findings and significant advances in the biological mechanisms underlying both solid and hematologic cancers.
Topics of interest include the following:
- Cancer biology and genetics:
- Oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, and genetic drivers of cancer
- Genome instability, including chromothripsis, kataegis, and structural variants
- Cancer-associated mutations and clonal evolution
- Cancer epigenetics and non-coding RNAs:
- Epigenetic reprogramming in tumor initiation and progression
- Alterations in non-coding RNAs (miRNAs, lncRNAs, circRNAs) and their roles in regulating cancer pathways
- Chromatin remodeling and 3D genome organization in cancer
- Cancer metabolism and tumor microenvironment:
- Metabolic rewiring in tumors (Warburg effect, nutrient sensing, and metabolic symbiosis)
- Cancer–stroma interactions
- Tumor microenvironment and immunometabolism
- Tumor–immune interactions:
- Tumor–immune co-evolution, immune escape, and immune editing
- Myeloid reprogramming, tumor-associated macrophages, and immune cell dynamics
- Immune checkpoint inhibition and tumor immunotherapy resistance mechanisms
- Tumor evolution:
- Tumor clonal architecture and intratumoral heterogeneity
- Phenotypic plasticity and lineage switching (e.g., epithelial–mesenchymal transition and neuroendocrine differentiation)
- Cancer stem cells, minimal residual disease, and mechanisms of relapse and dormancy
- Metastasis and Invasion:
- Mechanisms of metastatic spread and organotropism
- Tumor angiogenesis and the role of the vasculature in metastasis
- Physical forces, mechanotransduction, and mechanobiology in tumor invasion
- Emerging Technologies and Therapeutic Strategies:
- Single-cell genomics, spatial transcriptomics, and proteogenomics for cancer profiling
- Targeted therapies, synthetic lethality, and personalized approaches
- Organoids, organ-on-chip models, and other in vitro platforms
- Computational oncology and AI-driven approaches to uncover new cancer vulnerabilities
Editorial Board
Topical Advisory Panel
Special Issues
Following special issues within this section are currently open for submissions:
- Advances in the Molecular Pathogenesis of T-Cell Lymphoma (Deadline: 30 April 2026)
- Genetic Screening and Personalized Prevention in Hereditary Gastrointestinal Cancer Syndromes (Deadline: 30 April 2026)
- Extracellular Matrix—Role in the Tumor Microenvironment and Impact on Cancer Therapy (Deadline: 30 April 2026)
- Genetics of Ovarian Cancer (2nd Edition) (Deadline: 30 May 2026)
- Pathology of Renal Tumors (Deadline: 30 May 2026)
- Insulin Resistance, Diabetes, and Cancer: An Overview of the Pathogenetic Mechanisms (Deadline: 31 May 2026)
- Histopathology of Urological Cancers (Deadline: 10 June 2026)
- Metastatic Progression of Human Melanoma: 2nd Edition (Deadline: 15 June 2026)
- Histopathology and Pathogenesis of Skin Cancer (Deadline: 20 June 2026)
- Advances in Squamous Cell Carcinoma: From Pathogenesis to Treatment (Deadline: 20 June 2026)
- Recent Advances in Cancer Cytopathology (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Cancer-Associated Thrombosis, Arterial and Venous Thromboembolism (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Molecular Pathology and Human Cancers (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Basic and Translational Science in Ocular Oncology (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Prostate Cancer Pathology and Grade (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Unraveling the Connections Between the Microenvironment, Angiogenesis, Immunity and Mechanobiology in Cancer (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Advances in the Pathogenesis of Hematopoietic Neoplasms (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Hereditary and Familial Colorectal Cancer (Deadline: 30 June 2026)
- Oncogenetics of Colorectal Cancer (2nd Edition) (Deadline: 1 July 2026)
- Advances in Hodgkin Lymphoma (HL) (Deadline: 15 July 2026)
- ALK in Cancer: Lessons from the Future (2nd Edition) (Deadline: 31 July 2026)
- p53 Signaling in Cancer: Current Advances and Future Directions (Deadline: 31 July 2026)
- The TGF-β Pathway in Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Deadline: 31 July 2026)
- Melanoma: Pathology and Translational Research—2nd Edition (Deadline: 31 July 2026)
- Molecular Genomics in Brain Tumors (Deadline: 31 July 2026)
- The Molecular Pathogenesis of Lung Cancer: From Oncogenic Drivers to Tumor Microenvironment (Deadline: 24 August 2026)
- Pathology of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) (Deadline: 30 August 2026)
- Pathology of Gynecological Cancers (2nd Edition) (Deadline: 30 August 2026)
- Hereditary Cancer: State of the Art (Deadline: 31 August 2026)
- Molecular Pathology Insights in Thyroid Cancer (Deadline: 20 September 2026)
- Clinical Pathology in Cancer: From Diagnosis to Precision Medicine (Deadline: 28 September 2026)
- Chromatin-Remodeling Factors in Cancer Cells (Deadline: 30 September 2026)
- Mitochondria and Cancer: From Hidden Culprits to Healing Targets (Deadline: 30 September 2026)
- Stress, Epigenetic Regulation, and DNA Damage: Insights into Cancer Development and Therapeutic Challenges (Deadline: 30 September 2026)
- Molecular Pathology-Driven Approaches to Improve Cancer Diagnostic Accuracy (Deadline: 15 October 2026)
- Metabolism and Precision Oncology (Deadline: 31 October 2026)
- Role of Pathology in Detection, Prognosis and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Cancers (Deadline: 31 October 2026)
- Oncologic Pathology: Diagnostic Challenges, Molecular Advances, and Clinical Correlations (Deadline: 31 October 2026)
- Stem Cell Origin of Cancers: Biological and Clinical Implications of a Unified Theory of Cancer (2nd Edition) (Deadline: 31 October 2026)
- The Role of Nutrients in Cancer Progression (Deadline: 31 October 2026)
- Update in Pathology of Gynaecologic Cancer (Deadline: 30 November 2026)
- Metabolic Reprogramming and Neuroendocrine Regulation in Cancer: From Pathophysiology to Therapeutic Targets (Deadline: 30 November 2026)