| Literature DB >> 31537986 |
Carlotta Pucci1, Chiara Martinelli1, Gianni Ciofani1,2.
Abstract
Every year, cancer is responsible for millions of deaths worldwide and, even though much progress has been achieved in medicine, there are still many issues that must be addressed in order to improve cancer therapy. For this reason, oncological research is putting a lot of effort towards finding new and efficient therapies which can alleviate critical side effects caused by conventional treatments. Different technologies are currently under evaluation in clinical trials or have been already introduced into clinical practice. While nanomedicine is contributing to the development of biocompatible materials both for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes, bioengineering of extracellular vesicles and cells derived from patients has allowed designing ad hoc systems and univocal targeting strategies. In this review, we will provide an in-depth analysis of the most innovative advances in basic and applied cancer research.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; extracellular vesicles; gene therapy; immunotherapy; nanomedicine; pathomics; radiomics; targeted therapy; thermal ablation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31537986 PMCID: PMC6753017 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2019.961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.Cancer therapy approaches: The image represents the most innovative strategies to treat cancer, combining different disciplines to obtain the most efficient and personalised therapy for patients.
Figure 2.Cancer clinical trials. (A): Total number of clinical trials currently registered on www.clinicaltrials.gov for each approach discussed in this review. (B): Number of the clinical trials [in % respect with the total studies shown in (A)] started during the years 2008–2010 (blue) and from 2017 until today (orange). Date accessed: 01/08/19
Advantages and disadvantages of the main innovative cancer therapeutic approaches.
| Strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Nanoparticles | • High stability and specificity | • It depends on the particular nanoparticle |
| EVs | • Physiologically secreted | • Lack of preclinical procedures for isolation, quantification, storage and drug loading |
| Natural antioxidants | • Easily available in large quantities | • Limited bioavailability |
| Targeted therapy | • High specificity | • Lack of information regarding long-term side effects |
| Gene therapy | • Expression of pro-apoptotic and chemo-sensitising genes | • Genome integration |
| Thermal ablation | • Precise treatment of the interested area | • High efficiency only for localised areas |
| Radiomics/pathomics | • Creation of tumour whole tridimensional volume by non-invasive imaging techniques | • Definition of univocal data acquisition guidelines |