Cancer Dormancy and Criticality from a Game Theory Perspective

ORAL

Abstract

Background: The physics of cancer dormancy, the time between initial cancer treatment and re-emergence after a protracted period, is a puzzle. Cancer cells interact with host cells via complex, non-linear population dynamics, which can lead to very non-intuitive but perhaps deterministic and understandable progression dynamics of cancer and dormancy. Results: We explore here the dynamics of host-cancer cell populations in the presence of (1) payoffs gradients and (2) perturbations due to cell migration. {\bf Conclusions:} We determine to what extent the time-dependence of the populations can be quantitively understood in spite of the underlying complexity of the individual agents and model the phenomena of dormancy.

*This work was supported by NIH grants U54CA163214, 1PO1CA093900, U01CA143055, U54CA143803, and the Prostate Cancer Foundation, NSF PHY-1659940.

Presenters

  • Robert Austin

    • Princeton Univ

Authors

  • Robert Austin

    • Princeton Univ
  • Amy Wu

    • Banter
  • David Liao

    • University San Francisco
  • Vlamimir Kirilin

    • Princeton Univ
  • Ke-Chih Lin

    • Princeton Univ
  • James Sturm

    • Princeton Univ