Division of Genetic and Molecular Toxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research, 3900 NCTR Road, Jefferson, AR 72079, USA.
Expert Rev Mol Diagn. 2012 Jul;12(6):603-20. doi: 10.1586/erm.12.51.
Understanding the extent to which specific tumor mutations impact or mediate patient response to particular cancer therapies has become a rapidly increasing area of research. Recent research findings regarding four predominant mutational targets (KRAS, BRAF, EGFR and PIK3CA) show that these tumor mutations have predictive power for identifying which patients are likely to respond to particular therapies, and have prognostic significance irrespective of treatment. However, in this regard, the literature is frequently nuanced and sometimes contradictory. This lack of clarity may be due, at least in part, to the utilization of mutation detection methods with varying sensitivities across studies of different patient populations. Nevertheless, considerable evidence suggests minor tumor subpopulations may be contributing to inappropriate patient stratification, development of resistance to treatment, and the relapse that often follows treatment with molecularly targeted therapies. Consequently, mutant tumor subpopulations need to be considered in order to improve strategies for personalized cancer treatment.
了解特定肿瘤突变对特定癌症疗法的影响或介导程度已成为研究的热点。最近关于四个主要突变靶标(KRAS、BRAF、EGFR 和 PIK3CA)的研究结果表明,这些肿瘤突变具有预测能力,可以识别哪些患者可能对特定疗法有反应,并且具有预后意义,无论治疗与否。然而,在这方面,文献经常存在细微差别,有时甚至相互矛盾。这种不明确性可能至少部分归因于在不同患者群体的研究中使用了敏感性不同的突变检测方法。然而,大量证据表明,少数肿瘤亚群可能导致患者分层不当、对治疗产生耐药性以及分子靶向治疗后经常复发。因此,需要考虑突变肿瘤亚群,以改进针对个体化癌症治疗的策略。