A systematic review examined how neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) might influence the progression of gastrointestinal cancers. The authors summarized existing research on how NETs interact with tumor cells and the surrounding tissue environment.
The review suggests NETs may have a dual role. They could directly promote metastasis by helping tumor cells move, trapping circulating cancer cells, reawakening dormant cells, and making blood vessels leakier. NETs may also reshape the tumor microenvironment to help create a 'pre-metastatic niche,' a setting that supports future spread.
This work is a narrative synthesis of mechanisms, not a quantitative analysis of patient outcomes. It does not report safety data or clinical trial results. The main reason to be careful is that these findings are early and mechanistic; they do not prove that targeting NETs will be safe or effective in people.
Readers should view this as a helpful overview of a research area, not a guide for treatment. It highlights a potential biological process that may influence cancer, but more rigorous clinical studies are needed to understand any real-world impact.