| Literature DB >> 33925295 |
Severa Bunda1, Jeffrey A Zuccato1,2, Mathew R Voisin1,2, Justin Z Wang1,2, Farshad Nassiri1,2, Vikas Patil1, Sheila Mansouri1, Gelareh Zadeh1,2.
Abstract
Liquid biopsy, as a non-invasive technique for cancer diagnosis, has emerged as a major step forward in conquering tumors. Current practice in diagnosis of central nervous system (CNS) tumors involves invasive acquisition of tumor biopsy upon detection of tumor on neuroimaging. Liquid biopsy enables non-invasive, rapid, precise and, in particular, real-time cancer detection, prognosis and treatment monitoring, especially for CNS tumors. This approach can also uncover the heterogeneity of these tumors and will likely replace tissue biopsy in the future. Key components of liquid biopsy mainly include circulating tumor cells (CTC), circulating tumor nucleic acids (ctDNA, miRNA) and exosomes and samples can be obtained from the cerebrospinal fluid, plasma and serum of patients with CNS malignancies. This review covers current progress in application of liquid biopsies for diagnosis and monitoring of CNS malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: CSF; CTC; EV; ctDNA; exosome; liquid biopsy; microRNA; plasma; proteomics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33925295 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22094548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923