| Literature DB >> 24827503 |
David Church1, Rachel Kerr2, Enric Domingo3, Dan Rosmarin3, Claire Palles3, Kevin Maskell4, Ian Tomlinson5, David Kerr6.
Abstract
If we were to summarize the rationale that underpins medical oncology in a Latin aphorism, it might be 'veneno ergo sum'; that is, I poison, therefore I am. The burden of chemotherapy-associated toxicity is well recognized, but we have relatively few tools that increase the precision of anticancer drug prescribing. We propose a shift in emphasis from the focussed study of polymorphisms in drug metabolic pathways in small sets of patients to broader agnostic analyses to systematically correlate germline genetic variants with adverse events in large, well-defined cancer populations. Thus, we propose the new science of 'toxgnostics' (that is, the systematic, agnostic study of genetic predictors of toxicity from anticancer therapy).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24827503 DOI: 10.1038/nrc3729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Cancer ISSN: 1474-175X Impact factor: 60.716