“…The studies on HERV-K and cancer then intensified and many other types of cancer were also associated with the K family, as melanoma, leukemia, prostate, colorectal, brain, etc ( Figure 1 ) ( Brodsky et al., 1993 ; Sauter et al., 1995 ; Büscher et al., 2005 ; Manca et al., 2022 ). The studies spanned from the mRNA measures and the utility of HERV-K transcripts quantification as biomarkers for progression ( Contreras-Galindo et al., 2008 ), to the antibody anti-HERVs detection and mechanisms of malignancy and potential interventions ( Li et al., 2022 ; Manca et al., 2022 ; Zanrè et al., 2024 ). Although HERV-K is still the most explored HERV in cancer studies ( Figure 1 ), other families were also implicated in tumorigenesis as well.…”