Molecular-Targeted Therapy for Childhood Brain Tumors: A Moving Target.
Roger J PackerLindsay KilburnPublished in: Journal of child neurology (2020)
Molecular-targeted therapy is an attractive therapeutic approach for childhood brain tumors. Unfortunately, with some notable exceptions, such treatment has not yet made a major impact on survival or for that matter quality-of-life for children with brain tumors. Limitations include the specificity of any single agent to inhibit the target, the presence of multiple genetic abnormalities within a tumor, the likely presence of escape mechanisms and the frequent use of molecular-targeted therapies in relatively biologically unselected patient populations. Despite these limitations, the MEK inhibitors and the BRAF V600E inhibitors have already demonstrated efficacy and are being compared to standard therapy in trials of treatment-naïve patients. There is also great enthusiasm for molecular-targeted therapies that target selective gene fusions. Given the plasticity of epigenetic changes, the targeting of epigenetic aberrations is also a promising avenue of therapy. Because molecular-targeted therapies frequently target genes and pathways that are critical in normal brain development, the acute, subacute long-term sequelae of molecular-targeted therapies need to be carefully monitored.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- end stage renal disease
- copy number
- stem cells
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- multiple sclerosis
- liver failure
- case report
- respiratory failure
- drug induced
- blood brain barrier
- signaling pathway
- intensive care unit
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell therapy
- drug delivery
- brain injury
- functional connectivity
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- smoking cessation
- cerebral ischemia