| Literature DB >> 34623463 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer ranks among the top ten most common tumor types worldwide and represents a growing healthcare problem, accounting for a large part of total healthcare costs. Chemotherapy is effective in a subset of patients, while causing severe side effects. Tumor pathogenesis and drug resistance mechanisms are largely unknown. Precision medicine is failing in bladder cancer, as bladder tumors are genetically and molecularly very heterogeneous. Currently, therapeutic decision-making depends on assessing a single fragment of surgically acquired tumor tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Drug resistance; Organoids; Precision medicine; Urothelial cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34623463 PMCID: PMC8695536 DOI: 10.1007/s00292-021-00988-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathologe ISSN: 0172-8113 Impact factor: 1.011
Fig. 1Prospective population-based bladder cancer cohort infrastructure (ProBCI), the “cohort multiple randomized controlled trial” design [29, 30]. An observational cohort of bladder cancer patients with the condition of interest is recruited and their outcomes regularly measured. Then, for each randomized controlled trial, information from the cohort is used to identify all eligible patients. Some eligible patients are randomly selected and form the intervention arm. The outcomes of these randomly selected patients are then compared with the outcomes of eligible patients not randomly selected, i.e., those receiving standard of care. This process can be repeated for further randomized controlled trials