| Literature DB >> 24396506 |
Amanda Tufman1, Fei Tian1, Rudolf Maria Huber1.
Abstract
The treatment of patients with lung cancer is increasingly individualised. Rather than treating lung cancer as a single disease, clinicians are often called upon to consider the precise histology and molecular biology of each tumour in addition to the individual characteristics of each patient. Paralleling advances in lung cancer management, advances in the detection of lung cancer are changing practice. Lung cancer screening promises to find disease at a curable stage; however, the high false positive rate in screening trials has clinical and fiscal ramifications which demand attention. Biomarkers able to stratify for the risk of cancer, prognosticate the course of disease, or predict the response to treatment are in increasing demand. This paper summarizes some of the clinical problems faced by those treating lung cancer patients, and examines how knowledge about the role of microRNAs in lung cancer biology may change patient management.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; early detection; lung cancer; microRNA; predictive marker.; prognostic marker; screening; thoracic oncology; tumor biology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24396506 PMCID: PMC3881097 DOI: 10.7150/thno.6615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Drugable driver mutations in non small cell lung cancer (modified from Kris, MG ea. ASCO 2011 and Hammerman P ea. WCLC 2011).
| K-Ras | 22 % |
| EGFR | 17 % |
| EML4-ALK | 7 % |
| B-Raf | 2 % |
| Other | 6% |
| No driver mutation detected | 46 % |
| FGFR1 amplification | 20 - 25 % |
| FGFR2 mutation | 5 % |
| PIK3CA mutation | 9 % |
| PTEN mutation/deletion | 18 % |
| DDR2 mutation | 4 % |
The Individualised Treatment of Advanced Lung Cancer: Predictive Markers Currently in Clinical Use.
| Systemic Treatment | Predictive Marker |
|---|---|
| cisplatin or carboplatin paired with a second chemotherapeutic agent such as gemcitabine, docetaxel, paclitaxel or vinorelbine | none currently established for widespread clinical use |
| cisplatin or carboplatin paired with pemetrexed | non-squamous histology |
| epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) such a erlotinib or gefitinib | Activating EGFR mutation, in particular in exon 19 or 21 |
| bevacizumab in combination with platin-based doublet chemotherapy | non-squamous histology (due to increased risk of serious complications in patients with squamous cell histology) |
| monotherapy with docetaxel | none currently established for widespread clinical use |
| monotherapy with pemetrexed | non-squamous histology |
| epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) such a erlotinib or gefitinib | Activating EGFR mutation, in particular in exon 19 or 21 (note: erlotinib is also effective as a second line agent in patients without EGFR mutation) |
| anaplastic lymphoma kinase tyrosine kinase inhibitor (ALK-TKI) such as crizotinib | EML4-ALK translocation |
Fig 1While histology and cytology remain critical for establishing the diagnosis of lung cancer, minimally invasive biomarker sampling may allow for the risk-stratification of individuals being considered for lung cancer screening, and may improve monitoring during and after lung cancer therapy.
Fig 2As lung cancer therapies become increasingly tailored to the individual patient and tumour, re-sampling of biomaterials during the course of treatment and at progression are gaining relevance.