Challenges for Triple Negative Breast Cancer Treatment: Defeating Heterogeneity and Cancer Stemness.
Rinad MahmoudPaloma Ordonez-MoranCinzia AllegrucciPublished in: Cancers (2022)
The Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) subtype is known to have a more aggressive clinical course compared to other breast cancer subtypes. Targeted therapies for this type of breast cancer are limited and patients are mostly treated with conventional chemo- and radio-therapies which are not specific and do not target resistant cells. Therefore, one of the major clinical challenges is to find compounds that target the drug-resistant cell populations which are responsible for reforming secondary tumours. The molecular profiling of the different TNBC subtypes holds a promise for better defining these resistant cells specific to each tumour. To this end, a better understanding of TNBC heterogeneity and cancer stemness is required, and extensive genomic analysis can help to understand the disease complexity and distinguish new molecular drivers that can be targeted in the clinics. The use of persister cancer cell-targeting therapies combined with other therapies may provide a big advance to improve TNBC patients' survival.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- end stage renal disease
- single cell
- newly diagnosed
- induced apoptosis
- ejection fraction
- stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- multidrug resistant
- prognostic factors
- papillary thyroid
- primary care
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- signaling pathway
- acinetobacter baumannii
- squamous cell
- mesenchymal stem cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- drug delivery
- locally advanced
- combination therapy
- lymph node metastasis
- pi k akt