| Literature DB >> 27247631 |
Abstract
Despite advances in surgical techniques, perioperative therapies and postoperative management, outcomes for patients with bladder cancer have largely remained unchanged. Current management of bladder cancer still relies on pathologic staging that does not always reflect the risk for an individual patient. Studies assessing molecular alterations in individual tumors are offering insights into the myriad of cellular pathways that are deregulated in bladder tumorigenesis and progression. Alterations in pathways involved in cell-cycle regulation, apoptosis, cell signaling, angiogenesis and tumor-cell invasion have been shown to influence disease behavior. High-throughput assays are now allowing multiplexed assessment of biomarker alterations, thereby enabling characterization of novel molecular subtypes of bladder cancer. Such approaches have also been used for discovery and validation of robust prognostic molecular signatures. The future of bladder cancer management will rely on the use of validated multimarker panels for risk stratification, optimal surgical management, and theranostic strategies to identify and target specific alterations in individual tumors.Entities:
Keywords: expression profiling; immunohistochemistry; molecular subtyping; multimarker analysis; prognosis; risk stratification; urinary bladder neoplasms
Year: 2016 PMID: 27247631 PMCID: PMC4872193 DOI: 10.1177/1756287216638981
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Urol ISSN: 1756-2872