1. Prioritizing targets for precision cancer medicine.
- Author
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Andre, F., Mardis, E., Salm, M., Soria, J.-C., Siu, L. L., and Swanton, C.
- Subjects
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ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *TARGETED drug delivery , *INDIVIDUALIZED medicine , *TUMOR markers , *BREAST cancer , *LUNG cancer , *MEDICAL genomics - Abstract
Improved classification of actionable genomic alterations, may allow optimal interpretation of cancer genomics trials, enhancing understanding of the likelihood of benefit from targeted therapeutic approaches for patients and health professionals. In the current review, we analyse caveats and promises in the field of personalized medicine and propose evidence levels for target classification.The implementation of cancer genomic testing into the clinical setting has brought major opportunities. However, as our understanding of cancer initiation, maintenance and progression improves through detailed cancer genomic studies, the challenges associated with driver identification and target classification in the clinical setting become clearer. Here, we review recent insights into cancer genomic testing in the clinical setting, and suggest a target classification approach that considers the levels of evidence supporting the prioritization of tumour drivers for therapeutic targeting in light of complex cancer clonal and sub-clonal structures and clinical successes and failures in the field. We argue that such classification approaches, together with transparent reporting of both positive and negative clinical data and continued research to identify the sub-clonal dynamics of driver events during the disease course, will facilitate inter-trial comparisons, optimize patient informed consent and provide a critically balanced evaluation of genomic testing in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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