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http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9193
Title: | Not Everyone Fits the Mold: Intratumor and Intertumor Heterogeneity and Innovative Cancer Drug Design and Development |
Authors: | Dzobo, Kevin Senthebane, Dimakatso Alice Thomford, Nicholas Ekow Rowe, Arielle Dandara, Collet Parker, M. Iqbal |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
Publisher: | OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology |
Abstract: | Disruptive innovations in medicine are game-changing in nature and bring about radical shifts in the way we un- derstand human diseases, their treatment, and/or prevention. Yet, disruptive innovations in cancer drug design and development are still limited. Therapies that cure all cancer patients are in short supply or do not exist at all. Chief among the causes of this predicament is drug resistance, a mechanism that is much more dynamic than previously understood. Drug resistance has limited the initial success experienced with biomarker-guided targeted therapies as well. A major contributor to drug resistance is intratumor heterogeneity. For example, within solid tumors, there are distinct subclones of cancer cells, presenting profound complexity to cancer treatment. Well-known con- tributors to intratumor heterogeneity are genomic instability, the microenvironment, cellular genotype, cell plasticity, and stochastic processes. This expert review explains that for oncology drug design and development to be more innovative, we need to take into account intratumor heterogeneity. Initially thought to be the preserve of cancer cells, recent evidence points to the highly heterogeneous nature and diverse locations of stromal cells, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and cancer-associated macrophages (CAMs). Distinct subpopulations of CAFs and CAMs are now known to be located immediately adjacent and distant from cancer cells, with different subpopulations exerting different effects on cancer cells. Disruptive innovation and precision medicine in clinical oncology do not have to be a distant reality, but can potentially be achieved by targeting these spatially separated and exclusive cancer cell subclones and CAF subtypes. Finally, we emphasize that disruptive innovations in drug discovery and development will likely come from drugs whose effect is not necessarily tumor shrinkage. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9193 |
Appears in Collections: | School of Allied Health Sciences |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Not Everyone Fits the Mold.pdf | Main Article | 586.69 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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