Mechanisms of Resistance to Conventional Therapies for Osteosarcoma.
Louise MarchandetMorgane LallierCéline CharrierMarc Baud'huinBenjamin OryFrançois LamoureuxPublished in: Cancers (2021)
Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common primary bone tumor, mainly occurring in children and adolescents. Current standard therapy includes tumor resection associated with multidrug chemotherapy. However, patient survival has not evolved for the past decades. Since the 1970s, the 5-year survival rate is around 75% for patients with localized OS but dramatically drops to 20% for bad responders to chemotherapy or patients with metastases. Resistance is one of the biological processes at the origin of therapeutic failure. Therefore, it is necessary to better understand and decipher molecular mechanisms of resistance to conventional chemotherapy in order to develop new strategies and to adapt treatments for patients, thus improving the survival rate. This review will describe most of the molecular mechanisms involved in OS chemoresistance, such as a decrease in intracellular accumulation of drugs, inactivation of drugs, improved DNA repair, modulations of signaling pathways, resistance linked to autophagy, disruption in genes expression linked to the cell cycle, or even implication of the micro-environment. We will also give an overview of potential therapeutic strategies to circumvent resistance development.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- dna repair
- signaling pathway
- dna damage
- newly diagnosed
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- mesenchymal stem cells
- radiation therapy
- case report
- gene expression
- chronic kidney disease
- bone marrow
- prognostic factors
- risk assessment
- patient reported outcomes
- body composition
- long non coding rna
- pi k akt
- bioinformatics analysis