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Oscillations of the number of immune system cells in a space-velocity thermostatted kinetic theory model of tumor growth

Published 28 Apr 2021 in q-bio.CB, physics.bio-ph, and physics.comp-ph | (2104.13694v1)

Abstract: The competition between cancer cells and immune system cells in inhomogeneous conditions is described at cell scale within the framework of the thermostatted kinetic theory. Cell learning is reproduced by increased cell activity during favorable interactions. The cell activity fluctuations are controlled by a thermostat. The direction of cell velocity is changed according to stochastic rules mimicking a dense fluid. We develop a kinetic Monte Carlo algorithm inspired from the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method initially used for dilute gases. The evolution of an initially localized tumor is analyzed. Qualitatively different behaviors are observed as the field regulating activity fluctuations decreases. For high field values, i.e. efficient thermalization, cancer is controlled. For small field values, cancer rapidly and monotonously escapes from immunosurveillance. For the critical field value separating these two domains, the 3E's of immunotherapy are reproduced, with an apparent initial elimination of cancer, a long quasi-equilibrium period followed by large fluctuations, and the final escape of cancer, even for a favored production of immune system cells. For field values slightly smaller than the critical value, more regular oscillations of the number of immune system cells are spontaneously observed in agreement with clinical observations. The antagonistic effects that the stimulation of the immune system may have on oncogenesis are reproduced in the model by activity-weighted rate constants for the autocatalytic productions of immune system cells and cancer cells. Local favorable conditions for the launching of the oscillations are met in the fluctuating inhomogeneous system, able to generate a small cluster of immune system cells with larger activities than those of the surrounding cancer cells.

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