journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961709/causes-and-functional-intricacies-of-inter-and-intratumor-heterogeneity-of-primary-liver-cancers
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Subreen A Khatib, Xin Wei Wang
Tumor heterogeneity is a major feature of primary liver cancers. Defined as the unique genotypic and phenotypic differences of cancer cells within a single tumor (intratumor) or amongst different patients (intertumor), tumor heterogeneity has consistently been linked to worse clinical outcomes in most, if not all, solid tumor types. In particular, liver cancer heterogeneity has been associated with altered immune infiltration, resistance to therapeutics, and worse overall patient survival. Current advancements in single-cell omic technologies have allowed for a deeper understanding and appreciation of the intricate composition and relationships between individual cells within a tumor...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961708/immunotherapy-for-hepatobiliary-cancers-emerging-targets-and-translational-advances
#42
REVIEW
Dan Li, Shaoli Lin, Jessica Hong, Mitchell Ho
Over the past several decades, primary liver cancer (PLC), mostly hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), has become the focus of rising concern mainly due to the increasing rates of incidence and high global mortality. Immunotherapy, as an emerging treatment approach, represents an effective and promising option against PLC. However, the selection of immunotherapeutic targets while considering tumor heterogeneity and immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment is a major challenge...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961707/inflammatory-pathways-and-cholangiocarcinoma-risk-mechanisms-and-prevention
#43
REVIEW
Massimiliano Cadamuro, Mario Strazzabosco
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA), a neoplasm burdened by a poor prognosis and currently lacking adequate therapeutic treatments, can originate at different levels of the biliary tree, in the intrahepatic, hilar, or extrahepatic area. The main risk factors for the development of CCA are the presence of chronic cholangiopathies of various etiology. To date, the most studied prodromal diseases of CCA are primary sclerosing cholangitis, Caroli's disease and fluke infestations, but other conditions, such as metabolic syndrome, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and obesity, are emerging as associated with an increased risk of CCA development...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961706/immunotherapies-for-hepatocellular-carcinoma-and-intrahepatic-cholangiocarcinoma-current-and-developing-strategies
#44
REVIEW
Josepmaria Argemi, Mariano Ponz-Sarvise, Bruno Sangro
Liver cancer including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) is the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. HCC arises from hepatocyte or hepatic stem cells, while iCCA originates from biliary epithelial cells, and the respective biological context are very different. Despite screening programs, the diagnosis of liver cancer is in most cases made when curative treatments such as surgery or ablation are not possible. In 2020, after a decade of using only tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI), a combination of an immune-check point inhibitor (ICI) and a VEGF antagonist proved superior to a TKI as first line therapy of advanced HCC...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961705/molecular-therapeutic-targets-for-cholangiocarcinoma-present-challenges-and-future-possibilities
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dan Høgdall, Colm J O'Rourke, Jesper B Andersen
A diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is implicit with poor prognosis and limited treatment options, underscoring the near equivalence of incidence and mortality rates in this disease. In less than 9years from genomic identification to FDA-approval of the corresponding inhibitors, fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2) rearrangements and isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) mutations became exemplary successes of precision oncology in subsets of patients with CCA. However, clinical trial results from multikinase inhibitors in unselected populations have been less successful, while the impact of immunotherapies are only beginning to impact this setting...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961704/patient-derived-functional-organoids-as-a-personalized-approach-for-drug-screening-against-hepatobiliary-cancers
#46
REVIEW
Ling Li, Florin M Selaru
Patient-derived organoids (PDOs) established from hepatobiliary cancers are seen as valuable models of the cancer of origin. More precisely, PDOs have the ability to retain the original cancer genetic, epigenetic and phenotypic features. By extension, hepatobiliary cancer PDOs have the potential to (1) increase our understanding of cancer biology; (2) allow high-throughput drug screening for more efficient identification and testing of small molecule therapeutics, and (3) permit the design of personalized drug choice approaches for patients with liver cancer...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961703/yap1-activation-and-hippo-pathway-signaling-in-the-pathogenesis-and-treatment-of-intrahepatic-cholangiocarcinoma
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sungjin Ko, Minwook Kim, Laura Molina, Alphonse E Sirica, Satdarshan P Monga
Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), the second most common primary liver cancer, is a highly lethal epithelial cell malignancy exhibiting features of cholangiocyte differentiation. iCCAs can potentially develop from multiple cell types of origin within liver, including immature or mature cholangiocytes, hepatic stem cells/progenitor cells, and from transdifferentiation of hepatocytes. Understanding the molecular mechanisms and genetic drivers that diversely drive specific cell lineage pathways leading to iCCA has important biological and clinical implications...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961702/matricellular-proteins-in-intrahepatic-cholangiocarcinoma
#48
REVIEW
Alphonse E Sirica
Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) is typically characterized by a prominent desmoplastic stroma that is often the most dominant feature of the tumor. This tumor reactive stroma is comprised of a dense fibro-collagenous-enriched extracellular matrix (ECM) surrounding the cancer cells, together with other ECM proteins/peptides, specifically secreted matricellular glycoproteins and proteolytic enzymes, growth factors, and cytokines. Moreover, as enjoined by cholangiocarcinoma cells, this enriched tumor microenvironment is populated by various stromal cell types, most prominently, cancer-associated myofibroblasts (CAFs), along with variable numbers of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), inflammatory and vascular cell types...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961701/mechanisms-and-clinical-significance-of-tgf-%C3%AE-in-hepatocellular-cancer-progression
#49
REVIEW
Sobia Zaidi, Nancy R Gough, Lopa Mishra
Despite progress in treating or preventing viral hepatitis, a leading cause of liver cancer, hepatocellular cancer (HCC) continues to be a major cause of cancer-related deaths globally. HCC is a highly heterogeneous cancer with many genetic alterations common within a patient's tumor and between different patients. This complicates therapeutic strategies. In this review, we highlight the critical role that the Smad-mediated transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) pathway plays both in liver homeostasis and in the development and progression of HCC...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961700/cancer-associated-fibroblasts-in-intrahepatic-cholangiocarcinoma-progression-and-therapeutic-resistance
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aashreya Ravichandra, Sonakshi Bhattacharjee, Silvia Affò
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are one of the most abundant stromal cell type in the tumor microenvironment (TME) of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), where they are actively involved in cancer progression through a complex network of interactions with other stromal cells. The majority of the studies investigating CAFs in iCCA have focused their attention on CAF tumor-promoting roles, remarking their potential as therapeutic targets. However, indiscriminate targeting of CAFs in other desmoplastic tumors has ended in failure with no effects or even accelerated cancer progression and reduced survival, indicating the urgent need to better understand the nuances and functions of CAFs to avoid deleterious effects...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961699/novel-insights-into-molecular-and-immune-subtypes-of-biliary-tract-cancers
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily R Bramel, Daniela Sia
Biliary tract cancers (BTCs), which include cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) and gallbladder cancer (GBC), are heterogenous malignancies characterized by distinct molecular features often associated with specific clinical traits and/or outcomes. Such complex molecular heterogeneity, both within each BTC subtype and between distinct subtypes, poses a great challenge to personalized medicine. Recent technological advances have allowed the integration of multiple -omics derived from large cohorts of patients with distinct solid cancers to ultimately design stratification algorithms for prognostic prediction or more efficient treatment allocation...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961698/understanding-the-genetic-basis-for-cholangiocarcinoma
#52
REVIEW
Mikayla A Schmidt, Lewis R Roberts
Cholangiocarcinoma is associated with several different risk factors, many of which have known genetic associations. Advances in our understanding of the human genome have translated to the development of gene specific and whole genome assays for identifying gene variants and other alterations associated with cancer development. An improved understanding of the inherited genetic variants associated with risk of cholangiocarcinoma has the potential to improve our understanding of the basic biology of cholangiocarcinoma, enhance the performance of risk stratification models for identifying individuals at highest risk for cholangiocarcinoma, and identifying genetic variants associated with predisposition to cholangiocarcinoma in families with multiple affected individuals...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961697/implications-of-genetic-heterogeneity-in-hepatocellular-cancer
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Akanksha Suresh, Renumathy Dhanasekaran
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) exhibits a remarkable degree of heterogeneity, not only at an inter-patient level but also between and within tumors in the same patient. The advent of next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based technologies has allowed the creation of high-resolution atlases of HCC. This review outlines recent findings from genomic, epigenomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic sequencing that have yielded valuable insights into the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of HCC. The high heterogeneity of HCC has both clinical and therapeutic implications...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35961696/liver-cancer-risk-predictive-molecular-biomarkers-specific-to-clinico-epidemiological-contexts
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naoto Kubota, Naoto Fujiwara, Yujin Hoshida
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) risk prediction is increasingly important because of the low annual HCC incidence in patients with the rapidly emerging non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or cured HCV infection. To date, numerous clinical HCC risk biomarkers and scores have been reported in literature. However, heterogeneity in clinico-epidemiological context, e.g., liver disease etiology, patient race/ethnicity, regional environmental exposure, and lifestyle-related factors, obscure their real clinical utility and applicability...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779878/preface
#55
EDITORIAL
David A Gewirtz, Paul B Fisher
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779877/nephrotoxicity-in-cancer-treatment-an-update
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chaoling Chen, Dengpiao Xie, David A Gewirtz, Ningjun Li
It has been estimated that nearly 80% of anticancer drug-treated patients receive potentially nephrotoxic drugs, while the kidneys play a central role in the excretion of anticancer drugs. Nephrotoxicity has long been a serious complication that hampers the effectiveness of cancer treatment and continues to influence both mortality and length of hospitalization among cancer patients exposed to either conventional cytotoxic agents or targeted therapies. Kidney injury arising from anticancer drugs tends to be associated with preexisting comorbidities, advanced cancer stage, and the use of concomitant non-chemotherapeutic nephrotoxic drugs...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779876/chemobrain-a-review-on-mechanistic-insight-targets-and-treatments
#57
REVIEW
Vanishree Rao, Rashmi Bhushan, Priyanka Kumari, Sri Pragnya Cheruku, V Ravichandiran, Nitesh Kumar
Chemo-brain refers to the thinking and memory problems that occur in cancer patients during and after chemotherapy. It is also known as cognitive dysfunction or chemo-fog. Risk factors include brain malignancies, either primary or metastatic, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, either systemic or brain targeted. There are various mechanisms by which chemo-brain occurs in patients post-chemotherapy, including inflammation of neurons, stress due to free radical generation, and alterations in normal neuronal cell process due to biochemical changes...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779875/strategies-to-mitigate-the-toxicity-of-cancer-therapeutics
#58
REVIEW
Adriana M Kahn, Kim R M Blenman, Steve T Sonis, Maryam B Lustberg
Cancer therapeutics are dynamically evolving, and include traditional chemotherapy and hormone therapy, as well as more recently developed treatment modalities, such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies and the revolutionary approach based on immune checkpoint inhibition. These regimens are unfortunately not free of adverse events, and patients with cancer are a susceptible population experiencing a myriad of disease and treatment toxicities combined. In this review, we present the latest overview of the management of the most common systemic cancer treatment symptoms and the science of symptom management supporting these strategies...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779874/cardiac-complications-of-cancer-therapies
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adolfo G Mauro, Katherine Hunter, Fadi N Salloum
The quest of defeating cancer and improving prognosis in survivors has generated remarkable strides forward in research and have advanced the development of new antineoplastic therapies. These achievements, combined with rapid screening and early detection, have considerably extended the life expectancy of patients surviving multiple types of malignancies. Consequently, chemotherapy-related toxicity in several organ systems, especially the cardiovascular system, has surfaced as one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality among cancer survivors...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35779873/chemotherapy-induced-gastrointestinal-toxicities
#60
REVIEW
Hamid I Akbarali, Karan H Muchhala, Donald K Jessup, Stanley Cheatham
Chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal dysfunction is a common occurrence associated with many different classes of chemotherapeutic agents. Gastrointestinal toxicity includes mucositis, diarrhea, and constipation, and can often be a dose-limiting complication, induce cessation of treatment and could be life threatening. The gastrointestinal epithelium is rich in rapidly dividing cells and hence is a prime target for chemotherapeutic drugs. The incidence of gastrointestinal toxicity, including diarrhea and mucositis, is extremely high for a wide array of chemotherapeutic and radiation regimens...
2022: Advances in Cancer Research
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