| Literature DB >> 26834515 |
Joseph D Lamplot1, Sahitya Denduluri1, Jiaqiang Qin2, Ruidong Li3, Xing Liu2, Hongyu Zhang3, Xiang Chen4, Ning Wang5, Abdullah Pratt1, Wei Shui3, Xiaoji Luo3, Guoxin Nan2, Zhong-Liang Deng3, Jinyong Luo3, Rex C Haydon1, Tong-Chuan He6, Hue H Luu1.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common non-hematologic malignant tumor of bone in adults and children. As sarcomas are more common in adolescents and young adults than most other forms of cancer, there are a significant number of years of life lost secondary to these malignancies. OS is associated with a poor prognosis secondary to a high grade at presentation, resistance to chemotherapy and a propensity to metastasize to the lungs. Current OS management involves both chemotherapy and surgery. The incorporation of cytotoxic chemotherapy into therapeutic regimens escalated cure rates from <20% to current levels of 65-75%. Furthermore, limb-salvage surgery is now offered to the majority of OS patients. Despite advances in chemotherapy and surgical techniques over the past three decades, there has been stagnation in patient survival outcome improvement, especially in patients with metastatic OS. Thus, there is a critical need to identify novel and directed therapy for OS. Several Phase I trials for sarcoma therapies currently ongoing or recently completed have shown objective responses in OS. Novel drug delivery mechanisms are currently under phase II and III clinical trials. Furthermore, there is an abundance of preclinical research which holds great promise in the development of future OS-directed therapeutics. Our continuously improving knowledge of the molecular and cell-signaling pathways involved in OS will translate into more effective therapies for OS and ultimately improved patient survival. The present review will provide an overview of current therapies, ongoing clinical trials and therapeutic targets under investigation for OS.Entities:
Keywords: BMP; Bisphosphonates; IGF; IGFBP5; OS99; limb-salvage; osteosarcoma
Year: 2013 PMID: 26834515 PMCID: PMC4730918 DOI: 10.2174/1573394711309010006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cancer Ther Rev ISSN: 1573-3947