| Literature DB >> 32391281 |
James Meehan1, Mark Gray1,2, Carlos Martínez-Pérez1,3, Charlene Kay1, Lisa Y Pang2, Jennifer A Fraser4, Amy V Poole4, Ian H Kunkler5, Simon P Langdon5, David Argyle2, Arran K Turnbull1,3.
Abstract
Radiotherapy remains an important treatment modality in nearly two thirds of all cancers, including the primary curative or palliative treatment of breast cancer. Unfortunately, largely due to tumor heterogeneity, tumor radiotherapy response rates can vary significantly, even between patients diagnosed with the same tumor type. Although in recent years significant technological advances have been made in the way radiation can be precisely delivered to tumors, it is proving more difficult to personalize radiotherapy regimens based on cancer biology. Biomarkers that provide prognostic or predictive information regarding a tumor's intrinsic radiosensitivity or its response to treatment could prove valuable in helping to personalize radiation dosing, enabling clinicians to make decisions between different treatment options whilst avoiding radiation-induced toxicity in patients unlikely to gain therapeutic benefit. Studies have investigated numerous ways in which both patient and tumor radiosensitivities can be assessed. Tumor molecular profiling has been used to develop radiosensitivity gene signatures, while the assessment of specific intracellular or secreted proteins, including circulating tumor cells, exosomes and DNA, has been performed to identify prognostic or predictive biomarkers of radiation response. Finally, the investigation of biomarkers related to radiation-induced toxicity could provide another means by which radiotherapy could become personalized. In this review, we discuss studies that have used these methods to identify or develop prognostic/predictive signatures of radiosensitivity, and how such assays could be used in the future as a means of providing personalized radiotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers of radiation-induced toxicity; biomarkers of radiosensitivity; breast cancer; molecular signatures of radiosensitivity; precision medicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32391281 PMCID: PMC7193869 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.00628
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Precision medicine and radiotherapy. Patients could be stratified into different cohorts based on predicted intrinsic radiosensitivity and risk of toxicity. On-treatment monitoring may provide information on response to treatment, enabling adaptive changes to a patient's treatment to be made if necessary. Post-treatment biomarkers could be used to assess for evidence of toxicity, tumor recurrence or the development of metastatic disease.
Figure 2Biomarkers of radiotherapy response for breast cancer. An overview of cancer tissue-associated and blood-associated biomarkers of radiotherapy response that have been developed for breast cancer patients (ER, Estrogen receptor; PgR, Progesterone receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2).
Techniques used for measuring the response of tumors to RT.
Advantages and disadvantages of each method are provided (IHC, immunohistochemistry; RT, radiotherapy; CTCs, circulating tumor cells).