Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (topoisomerase)
9,166 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This years ASCO-meeting reinforced the trend of the recent years to get off from empirical treatment concepts to tailored and individualized diagnostics and therapy. However, the basis for an individual therapy is a specific molecular diagnostic which can be reflected in the analysis of hormonal receptor, HER-1, HER-2 and topoisomerase IIalpha in breast cancer. All these markers are not only able to prognosticate the course of disease but they also can predict the success of specific treatment approaches. Trastuzumab is standard therapy in HER-2 positive breast cancer both in the adjuvant and palliative setting. But new therapeutic agents, as e. g. lapatinib, are promising in the treatment of HER-2 positive breast cancer even if trastuzumab is failing. Otherwise it might possibly be an alternative option but adequate clinical results have to be awaited. The targeted inactivation of EGFR-related signal transduction pathways by e. g. gefitinib did not show a substantial improvement neither as a single agent nor in combination with endocrine treatment. However, the appropriate subgroup which might benefit from this therapy has to be defined even if molecular data suggest that patients with ER positive and PR negative breast cancer might be such a group. The increasing knowledge in terms of the biology of bone metastasis led to the development of new treatment options as e. g. denosumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody for RANK ligand. Two adjuvant cytotoxic treatment trials revealed that taxanes improve the prognosis of node positive breast cancer and should be administered sequentially. The advantage of switching to an aromatase inhibitor after two to three years of tamoxifen in endocrine treatment of postmenopausal patients is proved by two clinical trials (IES, ARNO) which could demonstrate a survival benefit. In conclusion it seems to be evident that new targeted therapy options are effective and will set new standards for the treatment of breast cancer patients in the near future. The presentation for the ovarian cancer focused on the addition of a third cytotoxic agent to carboplatin and paclitaxel as the standard therapy for the primary treatment of ovarian cancer. New data of Bevacizumab in the treatment of primary and recurrent ovarian cancer were presented. However, this is not yet a standard treatment for all patients and needs further investigations within large, multicentre, randomised trials. The lymphonodectomy as part of the primary therapy of the endometrial cancer seems to be a benefit at least in patients with advanced disease or high risk stage I tumours. The adjuvant therapy of uterine sarcomas is still not yet very well investigated and clear. A trial which recruited 12 years demonstrated a benefit in overall survival which has to be interpreted with caution. In this year again there have been registered an increasing number of interesting contributions from Germany, which also received international attention.
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PMID:[Molecular diagnostic and targeted therapy--"Barking dogs are going to bite": presentations from the 42nd Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Atlanta 2006]. 1700 57

Over the last few years it has been anticipated that molecularly targeted agents can provide substantial improvement in the treatment of breast cancer. The most illustrative paradigm has been that of trastuzumab (Herceptin), a humanized monoclonal antibody against the HER2 oncoprotein overexpressed in 25% of breast cancers. Trastuzumab when combined with standard cytotoxic chemotherapy improved the outcome and survival in patients with metastatic breast cancer, whereas, over the last 2 years studies incorporating trastuzumab in sequence to or concurrently with taxane-based chemotherapy in the adjuvant setting demonstrated a considerable benefi t in this subset, with the results of longer follow-up regarding long-term outcome and late toxicities expected over the forthcoming years. Moreover, the prognostic and predictive value of topoisomerase IIa (Topo IIa) overexpression in these subgroups with respect to anthracycline treatment has been extensively discussed and analysed. Other inhibitors of both HER1/HER2 have recently been introduced with promising results and results of ongoing studies are awaited with great interest. A recently anticipated target in advanced breast cancer has been the pathway of angiogenesis; first a humanized monoclonal antibody-bevacizumab (Avastin)- has demonstrated encouraging results when combined with chemotherapy in pretreated HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, while combinations with trastuzumab+/-chemotherapy are currently examined in HER2-overexpressing breast cancer. Furthermore, as novel molecular pathways relevant to breast cancer biology are explored, it is expected that a whole array of targeted agents will be tested in combination or in sequence to standard chemotherapy with the aim to improve outcome of high-risk breast cancer patients.
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PMID:Integration of novel targeted therapies into the systemic treatment of breast cancer--a review. 1791 84