Journal ArticleDOI
Personalised cancer medicine
Sarah E. Jackson,John D. Chester +1 more
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TLDR
The efficacy of various targeted therapies in such disparate tumours suggests that the authors are entering an era in which treatment decisions will be based on tumour molecular abnormality profile or “signature,” rather than tumour tissue type or anatomical site of origin, improving patient prognosis and quality of life.Abstract:
The evolving field of personalised medicine is playing an increasingly important role in cancer prevention, diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutics. Its importance in clinical management is demonstrated by the recent introduction into routine clinical practice of various individualised, molecularly targeted therapies with increased efficacy and/or reduced toxicity. The identification of cancer predisposition genes, such as the BRCA genes in breast cancer, permits screening programmes to identify patients “at-risk” of developing cancer and helps them make decisions on individual risk-modification behaviours. Personalised medicine also plays an increasingly important role in cancer treatment. It is increasingly clear that there are molecularly distinct subtypes of various common cancers, with different therapeutic approaches required for each subtype, for example, the use of the monoclonal antibodies (trastuzumab and cetuximab) in HER2-positive breast cancer and wild-type KRAS colorectal cancer; tyrosine kinase inhibitors (imatinib, gefitinib, erlotinib and crizotinib) in chronic myeloid leukaemia, gastrointestinal stromal tumours and non-small-cell lung cancer and intracellular agents (vemurafenib and olaparib) in metastatic malignant melanoma and ovarian, breast and prostate cancer. The efficacy of various targeted therapies in such disparate tumours suggests that we are entering an era in which treatment decisions will be based on tumour molecular abnormality profile or “signature,” rather than tumour tissue type or anatomical site of origin, improving patient prognosis and quality of life. This mini review focuses on the role of personalised medicine in cancer prevention and treatment as well as its future direction in oncology.read more
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Postgenomic technologies for genomic and proteomic analysis in biological and medical research
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Journal ArticleDOI
Erlotinib versus standard chemotherapy as first-line treatment for European patients with advanced EGFR mutation-positive non-small-cell lung cancer (EURTAC): a multicentre, open-label, randomised phase 3 trial.
Rafael Rosell,Enric Carcereny,Radj Gervais,A. Vergnenegre,Bartomeu Massuti,Enriqueta Felip,Ramon Palmero,Ramon Garcia-Gomez,Cinta Pallares,Jose Miguel Sanchez,Rut Porta,Manuel Cobo,Pilar Garrido,Flavia Longo,Teresa Moran,A. Insa,Filippo de Marinis,Romain Corre,Isabel Bover,Alfonso Illiano,Eric Dansin,Javier de Castro,Michele Milella,Noemi Reguart,Giuseppe Altavilla,Ulpiano Jimenez,Mariano Provencio,Miguel Angel Moreno,J. Terrasa,Jose Muñoz-Langa,Javier Valdivia,Dolores Isla,Manuel Domine,Olivier Molinier,Julien Mazieres,Nathalie Baize,Rosario García-Campelo,Gilles Robinet,Delvys Rodriguez-Abreu,Guillermo Lopez-Vivanco,Vittorio Gebbia,Lioba Ferrera-Delgado,Pierre Bombaron,R. Bernabé,Alessandra Bearz,Angel Artal,Enrico Cortesi,Christian Rolfo,Maria Sanchez-Ronco,Ana Drozdowskyj,Cristina Queralt,Itziar de Aguirre,Jose Luis Ramirez,Jose Javier Sanchez,Miguel Angel Molina,Miquel Taron,Luis Paz-Ares +56 more
TL;DR: Erlotinib has been shown to improve progression-free survival compared with chemotherapy when given as first-line treatment for Asian patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with activating EGFR mutations as discussed by the authors.
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