HMN 2025: What is the Key driver of pancreatic cancer spread

Key driver of pancreatic cancer spread identified
A 3D tumor vessel-on-a-chip model, showing pancreatic cancer cells (green) invading an engineered blood vessel (red) by breaking down the vascular basement membrane (yellow). Credit: Lee Lab

A Cornell-led study has revealed how a deadly form of pancreatic cancer enters the bloodstream, solving a long-standing mystery of how the disease spreads and identifying a promising target for therapy.

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is among the most lethal cancers, with fewer than 10% of patients surviving five years after diagnosis. Its microenvironment is a dense, fibrotic tissue that acts like armor around the tumor. This barrier makes difficult and should, in theory, prevent the tumor from spreading. Yet the cancer metastasizes with striking efficiency—a paradox that has puzzled scientists.

New research published in the journal Molecular Cancer reveals that a biological receptor called ALK7 is responsible, by activating two interconnected pathways that work in tandem. One makes cancer cells more mobile through a process called , and the other produces enzymes that physically break down the .

“In other words, ALK7 gives pancreatic cancer cells both the engine to move and the tools to invade,” said Esak Lee, lead author of the study and assistant professor in the Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering in Cornell Engineering.

The research helps resolve conflicting findings about ALK7, which some studies had linked to blocking cancer spread while others had tied it to driving it. Using mouse models of pancreatic cancer and advanced organ-on-chip systems that mimic human blood vessels, the researchers showed that blocking ALK7 significantly slowed metastasis.

The organ-on-chip system, developed in Lee’s lab, simulates the and is superior to animal models for studying different stages of the cancer. Using it, the researchers studied whether ALK7 drives the initial invasion of blood vessels or the later stage, when circulating exit the bloodstream to form new tumors in organs such as the lungs or liver.

What they found was that cancer cells couldn’t enter when ALK7 was inhibited. But when they mimicked a later stage of cancer by placing the cells inside the vessels, they spread quickly, indicating that the timing for treatment is crucial.

“Once we miss this early opportunity to block ALK7 receptors, the can freely circulate in the bloodstream and easily seed into other organs,” Lee said. “But if we can inhibit ALK7 at the cancer’s earliest and most vulnerable stage, we might see better outcomes for patients.”

The study also highlights the potential to apply organ-on-chip platforms to study other types of cancers, or how infiltrate and exit vessels.

“Some cancers have very different microenvironments so, potentially, ALK7 might show different impacts,” Lee said. “I hope this study really opens a new avenue for cancer research.”

More information:
Anna M. Kolarzyk et al, Non-canonical ALK7 pathways promote pancreatic cancer metastasis through ?-catenin/MMP-mediated basement membrane breakdown and intravasation, Molecular Cancer (2025). DOI: 10.1186/s12943-025-02384-w

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Cornell University



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