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Ovarian Cancer Molecular Stratification and Tumor Heterogeneity: A Necessity and a Challenge

Authors :
Charlie Gourley
Stefan Symeonides
Source :
Frontiers in Oncology, Vol 5 (2015), Symeonides, S & Gourley, C 2015, ' Ovarian Cancer Molecular Stratification and Tumor Heterogeneity: A Necessity and a Challenge ', Frontiers in Oncology, vol. 5 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2015.00229, Frontiers in Oncology
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2015.

Abstract

Only two new drugs have been licensed for the treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer in the last 5 years (bevacizumab and olaparib). These are also the only two molecularly targeted agents licensed in this disease. As we continue to move into the genomic era of cancer therapy, it is clear that optimal therapy is going to depend on molecular stratification and that the stratification itself is going to need to contend with tumor heterogeneity. In this article, we discuss molecular stratification and tumor heterogeneity in the context of high-grade serous ovarian cancer. The development of bevacizumab and olaparib has provided contrasting examples of stratification in molecularly targeted agents. Bevacizumab is licensed as an unselected agent, currently without molecular (or indeed histological) stratification. However, emerging data may be able to help us refine which patients may benefit the most from this agent (and which may not require it). Any such refinement can be expected to increase the median benefit in the selected population and reinforce the cost:benefit advantage. Conversely, olaparib is licensed as a highly selected agent, currently by genomic or somatic BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation in high-grade serous cancer. However, emerging data may be able to help us expand its role into tumors with other homologous recombination deficits (while also determining if all BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations respond equally). For both agents, however, cancers progress even on continuous therapy and targeting the resistant clones that have emerged from tumor heterogeneity will be key to extending benefit for these patients.

Details

ISSN :
2234943X
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e861c884a02cfd901b77cdb3fc3ddeac