Biologie moléculaire des cancers épithéliaux de l'ovaire

Alexandra Leary, Patricia Pautier, Youssef Tazi, Philippe Morice, Pierre Duvillard, Sébastien Gouy, Catherine Uzan, Hél̀ene Gauthier, Corinne Balleyguier, Catherine Lhommé

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    10 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Epithelial ovarian cancer frequently presents at an advanced stage where the cornerstone of management remains surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy. Unfortunately, despite sometimes dramatic initial responses, advanced ovarian cancer almost invariably relapses. Little progress has been made in the identification of effective targeted-therapies for ovarian cancer. The majority of clinical trials investigating novel agents have been negative and the only approved targeted-therapy is bevacizumab, for which reliable predictive biomarkers still elude us. Ovarian cancer is treated as a uniform disease. Yet, biological studies have highlighted the heterogeneity of this malignancy with marked differences in histology, oncogenesis, prognosis, chemo-responsiveness, and molecular profile. Recent high throughput molecular analyses have identified a huge number of genomic/phenotypic alterations. Broadly speaking, high grade serous carcinomas (type II) display significant genomic instability and numerous amplifications and losses; low grade (type I) tumors are genomically stable but display frequent mutations. Importantly, many of these genomic alterations relate to known oncogenes for which targeted-therapies are available or in development. There is today a real potential for personalized medicine in ovarian cancer. We will review the current literature regarding the molecular characterization of epithelial ovarian cancer and discuss the biological rationale for a number of targeted strategies. In order to translate these biological advances into meaningful clinical improvements for our patients, it is imperative to incorporate translational research in ovarian cancer trials, a number of strategies will be proposed such as the acquisition of quality tumor samples, including sequential pre- and post-treatment biopsies, the potential of liquid biopsies, and novel trial designs more adapted to the molecular era of ovarian cancer research.

    Titre traduit de la contributionThe molecular biology of epithelial ovarian cancer
    langue originaleFrançais
    Pages (de - à)1161-1173
    Nombre de pages13
    journalBulletin du Cancer
    Volume99
    Numéro de publication12
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 janv. 2012

    mots-clés

    • Molecular profile
    • Mutation
    • Ovarian cancer subtypes
    • Targeted-therapy

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