Jan-Philipp Cieslik, Bianca Behrens, Maggie Banys-Paluchowski, Maximilan Pruss, Melissa Neubacher, Eugen Ruckhäberle, Hans Neubauer, Tanja Fehm, Natalia Krawczyk, Natalia Krawczyk
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The detection of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in breast cancer has seen significant progress over the last two decades. These blood-based biomarkers offer a minimally invasive alternative to traditional methods for assessing disease progression and monitoring treatment response, with the potential to transform breast cancer management.
Summary: CTCs and ctDNA have emerged as valuable tools for prognosis and treatment guidance in breast cancer. Studies have shown that CTC count correlates with survival and changes in CTC levels can predict clinical outcomes (STIC CTC, DETECT III). Additionally, the molecular characterization of CTCs can help guide therapy (DETECT III). ctDNA, while also predictive of survival (BioItaLEE), provides further utility in identifying treatment failure (PADA-1, PALOMA III) and functions as a real-time tumor biopsy (plasmaMATCH, MONALEESA). Despite these promising advances, challenges remain, including the rarity of CTCs and the need for standardization in ctDNA detection methods.
Key messages: CTC and ctDNA detection have improved significantly and hold the potential for less invasive breast cancer management. CTCs are associated with survival outcomes and treatment guidance, while ctDNA is helpful in predicting treatment failure and can serve as a dynamic tumor biopsy. Ongoing research is needed to address the challenges of CTC rarity and variability in ctDNA detection methods for widespread clinical use.
期刊介绍:
With the first issue in 2014, the journal ''Onkologie'' has changed its title to ''Oncology Research and Treatment''. By this change, publisher and editor set the scene for the further development of this interdisciplinary journal. The English title makes it clear that the articles are published in English – a logical step for the journal, which is listed in all relevant international databases. For excellent manuscripts, a ''Fast Track'' was introduced: The review is carried out within 2 weeks; after acceptance the papers are published online within 14 days and immediately released as ''Editor’s Choice'' to provide the authors with maximum visibility of their results. Interesting case reports are published in the section ''Novel Insights from Clinical Practice'' which clearly highlights the scientific advances which the report presents.