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Precision medicine and its implementation in patients with NTRK fusion genes: perspective from developing countries

Authors :
Feliciano Barrón
Niki Karachaliou
Andrés F. Cardona
Oscar Arrieta
Marco Polo Peralta Álvarez
Rafael Rosell
Luisa Ricaurte
Leonardo Rojas
Nataly Zamudio-Molano
Alejandro Ruiz-Patiño
Christian Rolfo
C. Sotelo
Miguel Angel Molina-Vila
Zyanya Lucia Zatarain-Barrón
Luis E. Raez
Source :
Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease, Vol 14 (2020), Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2020.

Abstract

Precision oncology is the field that places emphasis on the diagnosis and treatment of tumors that harbor specific genomic alterations susceptible to inhibition or modulation. Although most alterations are only present in a minority of patients, a substantial effect on survival can be observed in this subgroup. Mass genome sequencing has led to the identification of a specific driver in the translocations of the tropomyosin receptor kinase family (NTRK) in a subset of rare tumors both in children and in adults, and to the development and investigation of Larotrectinib. This medication was granted approval by the US Food and Drug Administration for NTRK-positive tumors, regardless of histology or age group, as such, larotrectinib was the first in its kind to be approved under the premise that molecular pattern is more important than histology in terms of therapeutic approach. It yielded significant results in disease control with good tolerability across a wide range of diseases including rare pediatric tumors, salivary gland tumors, gliomas, soft-tissue sarcomas, and thyroid carcinomas. In addition, and by taking different approaches in clinical trial design and conducting allocation based on biomarkers, the effects of target therapies can be isolated and quantified. Moreover, and considering developing nations and resource-limited settings, precision oncology could offer a tool to reduce cancer-related disability and hospital costs. In addition, developing nations also present patients with rare tumors that lack a chance of treatment, outside of clinical trials. This, in turn, offers the possibility for international collaboration, and contributes to employment, education, and health service provisions. The reviews of this paper are available via the supplemental material section.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17534666
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ccb5348bcacb399810274e50b8189c43