Despite the development of drugs inhibiting the oncogenic proteins that cancer cells are dependent on, attempts to match targeted therapies to the genetic makeup of individual tumors is proving more difficult than expected. Until now, the paradigm has been a binary correlation between a mutated cancer gene and response to a given therapy. However, recent evidence indicates that different genetic alterations, such as mutations in different codons of a cancer gene, might be related to distinct sensitivity to targeted therapies. An example is the divergent effect that individual EGFR, PIK3CA and KRAS mutations might have on response or resistance to tailored drugs. Furthermore, the idea that the presence of a specific mutation translates into sensitivity or resistance to a particular drug is likely too simplistic, since it does not capture the complexity of the signaling pathways in an individual cancer. Only the overall genetic milieu (alterations in upstream and/or parallel pathways) ultimately determines the response of individual tumors to therapy. We have critically analyzed data supporting the genetic, biological and biochemical differences of individual mutations within a single cancer gene. The role of cancer mutations as predictors of sensitivity and resistance to targeted therapies is discussed, together with the implications for the 'personalized' treatment of cancer patients.

Targeted therapies: how personal should we go? [Recensione] / M. Martini, L. Vecchione, S. Siena, S. Tejpar, A. Bardelli. - In: NATURE REVIEWS. CLINICAL ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 1759-4774. - 9:2(2012), pp. 87-97. [10.1038/nrclinonc.2011.164]

Targeted therapies: how personal should we go?

S. Siena;
2012

Abstract

Despite the development of drugs inhibiting the oncogenic proteins that cancer cells are dependent on, attempts to match targeted therapies to the genetic makeup of individual tumors is proving more difficult than expected. Until now, the paradigm has been a binary correlation between a mutated cancer gene and response to a given therapy. However, recent evidence indicates that different genetic alterations, such as mutations in different codons of a cancer gene, might be related to distinct sensitivity to targeted therapies. An example is the divergent effect that individual EGFR, PIK3CA and KRAS mutations might have on response or resistance to tailored drugs. Furthermore, the idea that the presence of a specific mutation translates into sensitivity or resistance to a particular drug is likely too simplistic, since it does not capture the complexity of the signaling pathways in an individual cancer. Only the overall genetic milieu (alterations in upstream and/or parallel pathways) ultimately determines the response of individual tumors to therapy. We have critically analyzed data supporting the genetic, biological and biochemical differences of individual mutations within a single cancer gene. The role of cancer mutations as predictors of sensitivity and resistance to targeted therapies is discussed, together with the implications for the 'personalized' treatment of cancer patients.
English
growth-factor receptor; cell lung-cancer; metastatic colorectal-cancer; gastrointestinal stromal tumors; K-ras mutations; cetuximab plus irinotecan; breast-cancer; PIK3CA mutations; tyrosine kinase; gefitinib treatment
Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica
Recensione
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2012
9
2
87
97
11
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Targeted therapies: how personal should we go? [Recensione] / M. Martini, L. Vecchione, S. Siena, S. Tejpar, A. Bardelli. - In: NATURE REVIEWS. CLINICAL ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 1759-4774. - 9:2(2012), pp. 87-97. [10.1038/nrclinonc.2011.164]
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M. Martini, L. Vecchione, S. Siena, S. Tejpar, A. Bardelli
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/339426
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