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World J Gastroenterol. Aug 21, 2025; 31(31): 105665
Published online Aug 21, 2025. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v31.i31.105665
Table 1 Key mechanisms of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in gastrointestinal oncogenesis
Key mechanisms
Description
Potential implications
SARS-CoV-2 viral entry and replication in GI tractSARS-CoV-2 utilizes ACE2 receptors for cellular entry in the GI tract, triggering intracellular responsesAlteration of GI homeostasis, increased viral persistence, and systemic inflammation
Chronic inflammation and immune dysregulationPersistent inflammation can lead to genetic instability, cell transformation, and increased cancer riskLong-term tissue damage, enhanced susceptibility to malignancies
Potential viral integration into host DNAHypothetical integration of viral RNA into host DNA may cause genetic mutations and epigenetic alterationsPotential genomic instability, requiring further investigation
Gut microbiome dysbiosis and GI malignancy riskGut microbiota disruption linked to colorectal cancer progression due to immune suppression and chronic inflammationPossible link between COVID-19 recovery and long-term cancer risk
Immune escape and oncogenesisMutations enabling immune escape may promote persistent viral presence and tumorigenesisEmergence of new variants with oncogenic potential