Mathematical modelling of the use of macrophages as vehicles for drug delivery to hypoxic tumour sites

From MaRDI portal
Publication:2187492

DOI10.1016/j.jtbi.2003.09.004zbMath1439.92111OpenAlexW1992915004WikidataQ48024354 ScholiaQ48024354MaRDI QIDQ2187492

Markus R. Owen, Claire E. Lewis, Helen M. Byrne

Publication date: 3 June 2020

Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2003.09.004



Related Items

Mathematical modeling and bifurcation analysis of pro- and anti-tumor macrophages, Modeling the inhibition of breast cancer growth by GM-CSF, Modelling the effects of cell-cycle heterogeneity on the response of a solid tumour to chemotherapy: biological insights from a hybrid multiscale cellular automaton model, The role of CD200-CD200R in tumor immune evasion, Mechanisms and points of control in the spread of inflammation: a mathematical investigation, Mathematical model of macrophage-facilitated breast cancer cells invasion, Optimization of combined leukemia therapy by finite-dimensional optimal control modeling, A two-phase free boundary problem with discontinuous velocity: Application to tumor model, A detailed study on a tumor model with delayed growth of pro-tumor macrophages, Mathematical investigation into the role of macrophage heterogeneity on the temporal and spatio-temporal dynamics of non-small cell lung cancers, A cellular automata model of tumor-immune system interactions, Macrophage anti-inflammatory behaviour in a multiphase model of atherosclerotic plaque development, Mathematical modelling of a hypoxia-regulated oncolytic virus delivered by tumour-associated macrophages, Directionality of macrophages movement in tumour invasion: a multiscale moving-boundary approach, Mathematical modeling of tumor-immune cell interactions, Existence and uniqueness of the global solution for a mathematical model of the use of macrophages in tumor medicine, Modelling the formation of necrotic regions in avascular tumours, Early and late stage profiles for a chemotaxis model with density-dependent jump probability, Global existence for a mathematical model of the immune response to cancer, Patient-calibrated agent-based modelling of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS): from microscopic measurements to macroscopic predictions of clinical progression, Spatiotemporal dynamics of immunogenic tumors, Two-phase model of compressive stress induced on a surrounding hyperelastic medium by an expanding tumour



Cites Work