Affiliation:
1. Department of Oncology, Imperial College, Hammersmith Hospital Campus, London W12 8EE, UK.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer shows considerable variability in its chemoresponse, however, the prospect of individualized medicine holds high hopes for improving patient survival. The influence of interindividual genomic polymorphisms on drug response (pharmacogenomics) is well established, and a variety of candidate loci in ovarian tumors have been identified, including ERCC1, ABCB1 and p53 variants. Recently pharmacoepigenomic modulators of key genes and pathways, such as promoter methylation (MLH1 and BRCA1 genes) and microRNA regulation (PTEN/AKT and NF-κB pathways) have been implicated in ovarian cancer chemoresponse. Epigenomic studies have until now mainly focused on tumor-specific changes, although germ-line epigenetic change may also be of importance. However, assessing the relevance of these potential pharmaco(epi)genomic biomarkers in clinical trials requires well powered studies in homogeneous populations, with independent validation sets, to distinguish real associations from false-positives. In addition, the selection of one gene or locus as having sufficient phenotypic effect to impact on clinical outcome may be an oversimplification. Integrated approaches that identify stable pharmacogenomic and epigenomic patterns and their relationship with expression patterns and gene function will be increasingly necessary.
Subject
Pharmacology,Genetics,Molecular Medicine
Cited by
17 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献