Immune–Inflammatory Crosstalk in Cancer Progression: Translational Insights from Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte Ratio Studies
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62896/jcarr.3.1.03Keywords:
Immune–Inflammatory Crosstalk, Cancer Progression, Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte RatioAbstract
The interplay between the immune system and cancer is a fundamental determinant of disease progression, therapeutic response, and patient survival. Among various systemic inflammatory markers, the Neutrophil-toLymphocyte Ratio (NLR) has emerged as a robust, cost-effective, and readily accessible prognostic tool. An elevated NLR reflects a shift in the immune-inflammatory balance: a dominance of pro-tumorigenic innate responses (neutrophilia) over anti-tumor adaptive immunity (lymphopenia). This manuscript provides a comprehensive review of the translational mechanisms linking NLR to cancer progression, its role as a prognostic biomarker across various solid tumors, and its emerging utility in predicting responses to modern therapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitors.
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