| Literature DB >> 31445415 |
Massimiliano Salati1, Giulia Orsi2, Elisabeth Smyth3, Giordano Beretta4, Fernando De Vita5, Maria Di Bartolomeo6, Valentina Fanotto7, Sara Lonardi8, Federica Morano6, Filippo Pietrantonio9, Carmine Pinto10, Lorenza Rimassa11, Enrico Vasile12, Caterina Vivaldi13, Alberto Zaniboni14, Pina Ziranu15, Stefano Cascinu2.
Abstract
The overall 5-year survival of gastric cancer (GC) has change only little in the last decades and it remains the fifth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. However, in the past few years a more effective combination chemotherapy has raised the bar of curability of about 10% in resectable disease. Morever, a deeper knowledge of GC biology have unveiled biomarkers to help personalize adjunctive treatments in patients candidate to surgery. Despite a plateau in efficacy of fist-line treatment, incremental survival advantages have been recorded in unresectable advanced disease. The growing number of effective drugs in second and later lines along with a more judicious delivery of cytotoxics and early supportive interventions have enabled more patients to proceed beyond first-line. The continuum of care has become a reality in a considerable proportion of patients that offer opportunities to improve outcomes. Finally, the advent of the immune checkpoint inhibitors has brought great expectations in molecularly-defined subset of patients. This Review summarizes the state-of-the art in the management of GC together with novel concepts that have entered clinical development with the potential of change practice in the foreseeable future.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Gastric cancer; Genomic tumour profiling; Immunotherapy; Liquid biopsy; Targeted therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31445415 DOI: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2019.101889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Treat Rev ISSN: 0305-7372 Impact factor: 12.111