RNA sequencing for research and diagnostics in clinical oncology.
Bioinformatics
Clinical oncology
DNA mutations
Genomics
Molecular diagnostics
Molecular markers
Personalized medicine
RNA sequencing
Recurrent and metastatic disease
Targeted therapies
Transcriptomics
Journal
Seminars in cancer biology
ISSN: 1096-3650
Titre abrégé: Semin Cancer Biol
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9010218
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
02 2020
02 2020
Historique:
received:
30
06
2019
accepted:
16
07
2019
pubmed:
15
8
2019
medline:
18
12
2020
entrez:
15
8
2019
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Molecular diagnostics is becoming one of the major drivers of personalized oncology. With hundreds of different approved anticancer drugs and regimens of their administration, selecting the proper treatment for a patient is at least nontrivial task. This is especially sound for the cases of recurrent and metastatic cancers where the standard lines of therapy failed. Recent trials demonstrated that mutation assays have a strong limitation in personalized selection of therapeutics, consequently, most of the drugs cannot be ranked and only a small percentage of patients can benefit from the screening. Other approaches are, therefore, needed to address a problem of finding proper targeted therapies. The analysis of RNA expression (transcriptomic) profiles presents a reasonable solution because transcriptomics stands a few steps closer to tumor phenotype than the genome analysis. Several recent studies pioneered using transcriptomics for practical oncology and showed truly encouraging clinical results. The possibility of directly measuring of expression levels of molecular drugs' targets and profiling activation of the relevant molecular pathways enables personalized prioritizing for all types of molecular-targeted therapies. RNA sequencing is the most robust tool for the high throughput quantitative transcriptomics. Its use, potentials, and limitations for the clinical oncology will be reviewed here along with the technical aspects such as optimal types of biosamples, RNA sequencing profile normalization, quality controls and several levels of data analysis.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31412295
pii: S1044-579X(19)30209-3
doi: 10.1016/j.semcancer.2019.07.010
pii:
doi:
Substances chimiques
Biomarkers, Tumor
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
311-323Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interests in publishing this review paper