Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Novel Molecular Approaches for Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Therapy
Annual Review of Medicine 61(1): 317-328
Article 2010 English
Authors
AV
Augusto Villanueva
BM
Beatriz Mínguez
AF
Alejandro Forner
Abstract
1 min read
The genomic era is changing the understanding of cancer, although translation of the vast amount of data available into decision-making algorithms is far from reality. Molecular profiling of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common cause of death among cirrhotic patients and a fast-growing malignancy in Western countries, is enabling the advancement of novel approaches to disease diagnosis and management. Most HCCs arise on a cirrhotic liver, and predictably, an accurate genomic characterization will allow the identification of procarcinogenic signals amenable to selective targeting by chemopreventive strategies. Molecular diagnosis is currently feasible for small tumors, but it has not yet been formalized by scientific guidelines. Molecular treatment is a reality: Sorafenib confers unprecedented survival benefits in patients at advanced stages. Genomic information from tumor and nontumoral tissue will aid prognosis prediction and facilitate the identification of oncogene addiction loops, providing the opportunity for more personalized medicine.
Josep M. Llovet, Ying‐Bei Chen, Elisa Wurmbach, Sasan Roayaie, Maria Isabel Fiel, Myron Schwartz, Swan N. Thung, Gregory Khitrov, Weijia Zhang, Augusto Villanueva, Carlo Battiston, Vincenzo Mazzaferro, Jordi Bruix, Samuel Waxman, Scott L. Friedman
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