Health Dictionary Find a Doctor

Tumor hypoxia

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Overview

Tumor hypoxia is the situation where tumor cells have been deprived of oxygen. Hypoxic tumor cells usually resist to radiotherapy and chemotherapy [1] as they can be made more susceptible to treatment by increasing the amount of oxygen in them, but bioreductive prodrugs play a significant part in dealing with this kind of cells: they can kill the oxygen-deficient tumor cells selectively as hypoxic cytotoxins. Study of tumors in such conditions was pioneered by Dr L. H. Gray.

It can also be a result of the high degree of cell proliferation undergone in tumor tissue, causing a higher cell density, and thus taxing the local oxygen supply.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. W. A. Denny, Prodrug strategies in cancer therapy, Eur. J. Med. Chem., 2001, 36, 577–595

    Template:WH Template:WS

    Looking for the patient version?

    Back to the patient-friendly article

    © 2026 MyEClinic – IFTM Institut für Telematik in der Medizin GmbH