“…Previous empirical and theoretical work has suggested that cycling hypoxia makes it necessary for cancer cells to adapt to fluctuating environmental conditions (Gillies et al, 2018;Amend et al, 2018) and impacts on tumour growth by increasing clonal diversity, promoting metastasis and supporting more plastic phenotypic variants (Cairns et al, 2001;Cairns and Hill, 2004;Louie et al, 2010;Verduzco et al, 2015;Chen et al, 2018;Saxena and Jolly, 2019). In particular, it has been hypothesised that -by analogy with bacterial populations facing unpredictable environmental changes (Kussell and Leibler, 2005;Smits et al, 2006;Veening et al, 2008;Acar et al, 2008;Beaumont et al, 2009;Nichol et al, 2016) -cancer cell populations could utilise risk spreading through stochastic phenotype switching, which is also known as bet-hedging (Philippi and Seger, 1989), as an adaptive strategy to survive in the harsh, constantly changing environmental conditions associated with cycling hypoxia (Gravenmier et al, 2018;Gillies et al, 2018).…”