| Literature DB >> 21345283 |
David I Rodenhiser1, Joseph D Andrews, Theodore A Vandenberg, Ann F Chambers.
Abstract
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease. Patient outcome varies significantly, depending on prognostic features of patients and their tumors, including patient age, menopausal status, tumor size and histology, nodal status, and so on. Response to treatment also depends on a series of predictive factors, such as hormone receptor and HER2 status. Current treatment guidelines use these features to determine treatment. However, these guidelines are imperfect, and do not always predict response to treatment or survival. Evolving technologies are permitting increasingly large amounts of molecular data to be obtained from tumors, which may enable more personalized treatment decisions to be made. The challenge is to learn what information leads to improved prognostic accuracy and treatment outcome for individual patients.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21345283 PMCID: PMC3109557 DOI: 10.1186/bcr2791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Figure 1Correlating molecular and clinical characteristics can address the multiple aspects of biological, clonal and patient heterogeneity in breast cancer metastasis and lead to gene profiles, commercial assays and clinical trials that ultimately result in clinical applications to improve prognostic accuracy and treatment outcome for individual patients.