The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the long-term consequences of viral pneumonia, yet its impact on cancer development remains unclear. Here, we show that patients previously hospitalized with severe COVID-19 have an increased risk of subsequent lung cancer. Across multiple murine models, severe respiratory viral infections accelerated lung cancer growth, whereas vaccination mitigated infection-enhanced tumor progression. Mechanistically, prior viral pneumonia reprogrammed the lung into a pro-tumor microenvironment marked by the sustained accumulation of tumor-associated neutrophils and heightened immunosuppression. We observed persistent chromatin remodeling at key cytokine loci in immune and structural cells, linking inflammatory memory to tumor-promoting signals. Therapeutically, combined blockade of neutrophil recruitment and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) restored CD8(+) T cell function and suppressed tumor growth. Together, these findings establish a causal link between prior viral pneumonia and lung tumorigenesis, underscoring the need for enhanced surveillance and targeted interventions to reduce post-COVID cancer risk.
Respiratory viral infections prime accelerated lung cancer growth.
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作者:Qian Wei, Wei Xiaoqin, Barros Andrew J, Ye Xiangyu, Zhang Haibo, Yu Qing, Young Samuel P, Yeatts Eric V, Park Yury, Li Chaofan, Hao Sijie, Almeida-Santos Gislane, Tang Jinyi, Narasimhan Harish, Kirk Nicole A, Molinary Valeria, Li Ying, Li Li, Desai Bimal N, Chen Peter, Park Kwon-Sik, Zhou Anny Xiaobo, Sturek Jeffrey M, Chen Wei, Cheon In Su, Sun Jie
| 期刊: | Cell | 影响因子: | 42.500 |
| 时间: | 2026 | 起止号: | 2026 Mar 11 |
| doi: | 10.1016/j.cell.2026.02.013 | ||
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