Liquid Biopsy: Current Status and Future Perspectives
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Liquid Biopsy: Current Status and Future Perspectives. / Mader, Sonja; Pantel, Klaus.
in: ONCOL RES TREAT, Jahrgang 40, Nr. 7-8, 2017, S. 404-408.Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/Zeitung › SCORING: Review › Forschung
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Liquid Biopsy: Current Status and Future Perspectives
AU - Mader, Sonja
AU - Pantel, Klaus
N1 - © 2017 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Cancer patients usually receive therapies according to their primary tumor's molecular traits. These characteristics may change during the molecular evolution of distant metastases as the leading cause of cancer deaths. Primary tumor tissue, if accessible at all, does not always provide enough information to stratify individual patients to the most promising therapy. Re-analysis of metastatic lesions by needle biopsy is possible but invasive, and limited by the known intra-patient heterogeneity of individual lesions. These hurdles might be overcome by analyzing tumor cells or tumor cell products in blood samples (liquid biopsy), which in principle might reflect all subclones present at that specific time point and allow sequential monitoring of disease evolution. Liquid biopsies inform on circulating tumor cells as well as tumor-derived cell-free nucleic acids, exosomes and platelets. Here, we introduce the different approaches of blood-based liquid biopsies and discuss the clinical applications in oncology.
AB - Cancer patients usually receive therapies according to their primary tumor's molecular traits. These characteristics may change during the molecular evolution of distant metastases as the leading cause of cancer deaths. Primary tumor tissue, if accessible at all, does not always provide enough information to stratify individual patients to the most promising therapy. Re-analysis of metastatic lesions by needle biopsy is possible but invasive, and limited by the known intra-patient heterogeneity of individual lesions. These hurdles might be overcome by analyzing tumor cells or tumor cell products in blood samples (liquid biopsy), which in principle might reflect all subclones present at that specific time point and allow sequential monitoring of disease evolution. Liquid biopsies inform on circulating tumor cells as well as tumor-derived cell-free nucleic acids, exosomes and platelets. Here, we introduce the different approaches of blood-based liquid biopsies and discuss the clinical applications in oncology.
KW - Journal Article
U2 - 10.1159/000478018
DO - 10.1159/000478018
M3 - SCORING: Review article
C2 - 28693023
VL - 40
SP - 404
EP - 408
JO - ONCOL RES TREAT
JF - ONCOL RES TREAT
SN - 2296-5270
IS - 7-8
ER -