organotropisme
Organotropisme, or organotropism in English, is the tendency of cancer cells to metastasize preferentially to certain organs rather than to random sites. It reflects a combination of tumor cell properties and the microenvironment of distant tissues, and it is a central concept in understanding metastatic spread rather than primary tumor growth. The idea is historically linked to the seed and soil hypothesis, which posits that disseminated tumor cells (the seeds) thrive only in compatible organ environments (the soils).
Several mechanisms contribute to organotropisme. Hemodynamic patterns influence where circulating tumor cells lodge. Adhesion molecules, proteases,
Examples of organotropism are common in clinical cancer care: breast cancer often metastasizes to bone, liver,
Understanding organotropisme informs research into preventing or treating metastasis by targeting chemokine axes, niche formation, and