Genetic Signature of Human Pancreatic Cancer and Personalized Targeting.
Stephan Joel ReshkinRosa Angela CardoneTomas KoltaiPublished in: Cells (2024)
Pancreatic cancer is a highly lethal disease with a 5-year survival rate of around 11-12%. Surgery, being the treatment of choice, is only possible in 20% of symptomatic patients. The main reason is that when it becomes symptomatic, IT IS the tumor is usually locally advanced and/or has metastasized to distant organs; thus, early diagnosis is infrequent. The lack of specific early symptoms is an important cause of late diagnosis. Unfortunately, diagnostic tumor markers become positive at a late stage, and there is a lack of early-stage markers. Surgical and non-surgical cases are treated with neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant chemotherapy, and the results are usually poor. However, personalized targeted therapy directed against tumor drivers may improve this situation. Until recently, many pancreatic tumor driver genes/proteins were considered untargetable. Chemical and physical characteristics of mutated KRAS are a formidable challenge to overcome. This situation is slowly changing. For the first time, there are candidate drugs that can target the main driver gene of pancreatic cancer: KRAS. Indeed, KRAS inhibition has been clinically achieved in lung cancer and, at the pre-clinical level, in pancreatic cancer as well. This will probably change the very poor outlook for this disease. This paper reviews the genetic characteristics of sporadic and hereditary predisposition to pancreatic cancer and the possibilities of a personalized treatment according to the genetic signature.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- locally advanced
- early stage
- end stage renal disease
- rectal cancer
- copy number
- squamous cell carcinoma
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- lymph node
- physical activity
- dna methylation
- mental health
- minimally invasive
- randomized controlled trial
- radiation therapy
- late onset
- peritoneal dialysis
- coronary artery disease
- prognostic factors
- genome wide identification
- depressive symptoms
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- patient reported outcomes
- patient reported