Rechallenge Strategy in Cancer Therapy.


Journal

Oncology
ISSN: 1423-0232
Titre abrégé: Oncology
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 0135054

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2020
Historique:
received: 30 03 2020
accepted: 08 04 2020
pubmed: 1 7 2020
medline: 21 10 2020
entrez: 30 6 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Drug resistance is one of the most important factors limiting the success of systemic anticancer therapy in achieving cure or prolonged overall survival. In clinical practice, resistant disease describes cancer that is found to have progressed since the time of treatment initiation. The term "drug resistant" is often used synonymously with "progressive disease" when referring to a treated tumour. Stopping a treatment at the time of disease progression is the current dominant approach of clinical trial conduct; therefore, available data from clinical trials are routinely not able to provide any information that could challenge this concept of permanent drug resistance. However, drug rechallenge and treatment continuation beyond progression have emerged as potential strategies in the past decade, especially for molecularly targeted agents and immunotherapy. In this review we focussed on rechallenge strategies for chemotherapy, immune therapy and targeted therapy in the main types of cancer.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32599578
pii: 000507816
doi: 10.1159/000507816
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

669-679

Informations de copyright

© 2020 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Auteurs

Ekaterina Hanovich (E)

The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre, Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, ehanovich@toh.ca.

Tim Asmis (T)

The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre, Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Michael Ong (M)

The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre, Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

David Stewart (D)

The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre, Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

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Classifications MeSH