Literature DB >> 12749725

Implications of genetic testing in the management of colorectal cancer.

Jan Stoehlmacher1, Heinz-Josef Lenz.   

Abstract

The prognosis of patients with colorectal cancer is impacted by various factors at the time of diagnosis, including location of the tumor, gender, age and overall performance status of the patient. Optimal postoperative management of patients who have undergone successful tumor resection involves the utilization of reliable determninants of prognosis to help select patients who would benefit from adjuvant treatment, while sparing others from drug-related adverse effects. Tailoring chemotherapy for patients with disseminated cancer, or for patients who receive adjuvant chemotherapy, is also critical. Interpatient differences in tumor response and drug toxicity are common during chemotherapy. Genomic variability of key metabolic enzyme complexes, drug targets, and drug transport molecules is an important contributing factor. The identification of genetic markers of response and prognosis will aid in the development of more individualized chemotherapuetic strategies for cancer patients. Potential prognostic indicators in colorectal cancer include oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, genes involved in angiogenic and apoptotic pathways and cell proliferation, and those encoding targets of chemotherapy. Specifically, molecular markers such as deletion of 18q (DCC), p27 and microsatellite instability are promising as indicators of good or poor prognosis. Molecular determinants of efficacy and host toxicity of the most commonly used drugs in colorectal cancer, fluoracil, irinotecan and oxaliplatin, are being investigated. Alterations in gene expression, protein expression and polymorphic variants in genes encoding thymidylate synthase, dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, dUTP nucleotidehydrolase and thymidine phosphorylase (for fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy), uridine diphosphate glucosyltransferase (UGT) 1A1 and carboxylesterase (for irinotecan therapy), and excision repair cross-complementing genes (ERCC1 and ERCC2) and glutathione-S-transferase P1 (for oxalilplatin-based regimens) may be useful as markers for clinical drug response, survival and host toxicity.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12749725     DOI: 10.2165/00129785-200303020-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pharmacogenomics        ISSN: 1175-2203


  4 in total

1.  [mRNA quantification. The next challenge in routine diagnostics].

Authors:  A Jung; S Jaitner; A J Schäffauer; T Kirchner
Journal:  Pathologe       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 1.011

2.  Common denominator genes that distinguish colorectal carcinoma from normal mucosa.

Authors:  Roland S Croner; Thomas Foertsch; Wolfgang M Brueckl; Klaus Guenther; Renate Siebenhaar; Christian Stremmel; Klaus E Matzel; Thomas Papadopoulos; Thomas Kirchner; Jürgen Behrens; Ludger Klein-Hitpass; Michael Stuerzl; Werner Hohenberger; Bertram Reingruber
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2004-12-22       Impact factor: 2.571

3.  Molecular inversion probe analysis of gene copy alterations reveals distinct categories of colorectal carcinoma.

Authors:  Hanlee Ji; Jochen Kumm; Michael Zhang; Kyle Farnam; Keyan Salari; Malek Faham; James M Ford; Ronald W Davis
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2006-08-15       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Bioinformatory-assisted analysis of next-generation sequencing data for precision medicine in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Linnéa Malgerud; Johan Lindberg; Valtteri Wirta; Maria Gustafsson-Liljefors; Masoud Karimi; Carlos Fernández Moro; Katrin Stecker; Alexander Picker; Carolin Huelsewig; Martin Stein; Regina Bohnert; Marco Del Chiaro; Stephan L Haas; Rainer L Heuchel; Johan Permert; Markus J Maeurer; Stephan Brock; Caroline S Verbeke; Lars Engstrand; David B Jackson; Henrik Grönberg; Johannes Matthias Löhr
Journal:  Mol Oncol       Date:  2017-08-08       Impact factor: 6.603

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.