@Article{Białas2011,
journal="Contemporary Oncology/Współczesna Onkologia",
issn="1428-2526",
volume="15",
number="5",
year="2011",
title="The tumour and its microenvironment – a complicated interplay",
abstract="A whole range of complex interactions develops between growing malignant neoplastic cells and non-malignant stromal elements of a tumour. The tumour microenvironment includes a number  of interrelated elements: fibroblasts, macrophages and dendritic cells, endo­thelial cells, pericytes, inflammatory cells and extracellular matrix components. All these elements are actively involved in tumour growth and progression and angiogenesis, and can either promote or inhibit these processes. Understanding of the relationship between the various components of the tumour microenvironment and tumour cells may allow the introduction of combination drug therapy having different target points which gives hope of reducing the doses of medicines, and thus reducing their toxicity while increasing their efficiency.",
author="Białas, Magdalena
and Dyduch, Grzegorz
and Adamek, Dariusz",
pages="305--308",
doi="10.5114/wo.2011.25659",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.5114/wo.2011.25659"
}