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Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept

As complex and heterogeneous diseases, cancers require a more tailored therapeutic management than most pathologies. Recent advances in anticancer drug development, including the immuno-oncology revolution, have been too often plagued by unsatisfying patient response rates and survivals. In reaction...

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Autores principales: Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe, Vanderstraete, Mathieu, Giraud, Stéphanie, Lautrette, Christophe, Christou, Niki, Mathonnet, Muriel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8490527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34646385
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.55954
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author Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe
Vanderstraete, Mathieu
Giraud, Stéphanie
Lautrette, Christophe
Christou, Niki
Mathonnet, Muriel
author_facet Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe
Vanderstraete, Mathieu
Giraud, Stéphanie
Lautrette, Christophe
Christou, Niki
Mathonnet, Muriel
author_sort Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe
collection PubMed
description As complex and heterogeneous diseases, cancers require a more tailored therapeutic management than most pathologies. Recent advances in anticancer drug development, including the immuno-oncology revolution, have been too often plagued by unsatisfying patient response rates and survivals. In reaction to this, cancer care has fully transitioned to the “personalized medicine” concept. Numerous tools are now available tools to better adapt treatments to the profile of each patient. They encompass a large array of diagnostic assays, based on biomarkers relevant to targetable molecular pathways. As a subfamily of such so-called companion diagnostics, chemosensitivity and resistance assays represent an attractive, yet insufficiently understood, approach to individualize treatments. They rely on the assessment of a composite biomarker, the ex vivo functional response of cancer cells to drugs, to predict a patient's outcome. Systemic treatments, such as chemotherapies, as well as targeted treatments, whose efficacy cannot be fully predicted yet by other diagnostic tests, may be assessed through these means. The results can provide helpful information to assist clinicians in their decision-making process. We explore here the most advanced functional assays across oncology indications, with an emphasis on tests already displaying a convincing clinical demonstration. We then recapitulate the main technical obstacles faced by researchers and clinicians to produce more accurate, and thus more predictive, models and the recent advances that have been developed to circumvent them. Finally, we summarize the regulatory and quality frameworks surrounding functional assays to ensure their safe and performant clinical implementation. Functional assays are valuable in vitro diagnostic tools that already stand beyond the “proof-of-concept” stage. Clinical studies show they have a major role to play by themselves but also in conjunction with molecular diagnostics. They now need a final lift to fully integrate the common armament used against cancers, and thus make their way into the clinical routine.
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spelling pubmed-84905272021-10-12 Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe Vanderstraete, Mathieu Giraud, Stéphanie Lautrette, Christophe Christou, Niki Mathonnet, Muriel Theranostics Review As complex and heterogeneous diseases, cancers require a more tailored therapeutic management than most pathologies. Recent advances in anticancer drug development, including the immuno-oncology revolution, have been too often plagued by unsatisfying patient response rates and survivals. In reaction to this, cancer care has fully transitioned to the “personalized medicine” concept. Numerous tools are now available tools to better adapt treatments to the profile of each patient. They encompass a large array of diagnostic assays, based on biomarkers relevant to targetable molecular pathways. As a subfamily of such so-called companion diagnostics, chemosensitivity and resistance assays represent an attractive, yet insufficiently understood, approach to individualize treatments. They rely on the assessment of a composite biomarker, the ex vivo functional response of cancer cells to drugs, to predict a patient's outcome. Systemic treatments, such as chemotherapies, as well as targeted treatments, whose efficacy cannot be fully predicted yet by other diagnostic tests, may be assessed through these means. The results can provide helpful information to assist clinicians in their decision-making process. We explore here the most advanced functional assays across oncology indications, with an emphasis on tests already displaying a convincing clinical demonstration. We then recapitulate the main technical obstacles faced by researchers and clinicians to produce more accurate, and thus more predictive, models and the recent advances that have been developed to circumvent them. Finally, we summarize the regulatory and quality frameworks surrounding functional assays to ensure their safe and performant clinical implementation. Functional assays are valuable in vitro diagnostic tools that already stand beyond the “proof-of-concept” stage. Clinical studies show they have a major role to play by themselves but also in conjunction with molecular diagnostics. They now need a final lift to fully integrate the common armament used against cancers, and thus make their way into the clinical routine. Ivyspring International Publisher 2021-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8490527/ /pubmed/34646385 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.55954 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Review
Bounaix Morand du Puch, Christophe
Vanderstraete, Mathieu
Giraud, Stéphanie
Lautrette, Christophe
Christou, Niki
Mathonnet, Muriel
Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title_full Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title_fullStr Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title_full_unstemmed Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title_short Benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
title_sort benefits of functional assays in personalized cancer medicine: more than just a proof-of-concept
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8490527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34646385
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.55954
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