Evaluation of treatment effects in patients with endometrial cancer and POLE mutations: An individual patient data meta-analysis.
Jessica N McAlpineDerek S ChiuRemi A NoutDavid N ChurchPascal SchmidtStephanie LamSamuel LeungStefania BelloneAdele WongSara Y BruckerCheng Han LeeBlaise A ClarkeDavid G HuntsmanMarcus Q BernardiniJoanne NgeowAlessandro D SantinPaul J GoodfellowDouglas A LevineMartin KöbelStefan KommossTjalling BosseC Blake GilksAline TalhoukPublished in: Cancer (2021)
Ten percent of all endometrial cancers have mutations in the DNA repair gene DNA polymerase epsilon (POLE). Women who have endometrial cancers with true POLE mutations experience almost no recurrences or deaths from their cancer even when their tumors appear to have very unfavorable characteristics. Additional therapy (radiation and chemotherapy) does not appear to improve outcomes for women with POLE-mutated endometrial cancer, and this supports the move to less therapy and less associated toxicity. Diligent classification of endometrial cancers by molecular features provides valuable information to inform prognosis and to direct treatment/no treatment.
Keyphrases
- endometrial cancer
- dna repair
- systematic review
- stem cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- machine learning
- healthcare
- randomized controlled trial
- oxidative stress
- single molecule
- dna methylation
- skeletal muscle
- genome wide
- bone marrow
- deep learning
- copy number
- case report
- pregnancy outcomes
- replacement therapy
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell
- cell free
- meta analyses
- rectal cancer