Walker on tightrope made with DNA

Understanding chromosomal instability in cancer

Learn more about this and other topics in our September issue

  • Duaa H. Al-Rawi
  • Emanuele Lettera
  • Samuel F. Bakhoum
Review Article

Announcements

  • cells joined through antibodies

    The article "Bispecific and multispecific antibodies in oncology: opportunities and challenges" from M-E. Goebeler et al. will be freely available while the September 2024 issue is featured on the journal's homepage

  • flowchart showing laboratory pipelines

    The article "Spatial landscapes of cancers: insights and opportunities" from J. Chen et al. will be freely available while the September 2024 issue is featured on the journal's homepage

  • charts overlaid with maps

    In this Collection, you can find the latest articles published in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology that discuss trends in cancer incidence and mortality.

Advertisement

    • Patients with HER2+ breast cancer often respond to trastuzumab, although acquired resistance is common and can involve a range of mechanisms. reflecting the highly heterogeneous biology of this breast cancer subtype. In this Review, the authors describe the role of dual HER2 blockade, involving the co-administration of two HER2-targeted therapies (including monoclonal antibodies, tyrosine kinase inhibitors and antibody–drug conjugates) in patients with HER2+ breast cancer.

      • Adrienne G. Waks
      • Olga Martínez-Sáez
      • Aleix Prat
      Review Article
    • The development of clinically relevant artificial intelligence (AI) models has traditionally required access to extensive labelled datasets, which inevitably centre AI advances around large centres and private corporations. Data availability has also dictated the development of AI applications: most studies focus on common cancer types, and leave rare diseases behind. However, this paradigm is changing with the advent of foundation models, which enable the training of more powerful and robust AI systems using much smaller datasets.

      • Jana Lipkova
      • Jakob Nikolas Kather
      News & Views
    • Although ovarian cancer is considered an immunoreactive disease, moderate to no efficacy has been shown in the trials testing immune-checkpoint inhibitors in these patients performed thus far. The authors of this Review summarize these results and propose a systematic classification of ovarian cancer based on CD8+ T cell immunophenotypes that, integrated with genetic data, can enable the design of tailored therapeutic approaches, including adoptive cell therapy and novel immunotherapy combinations.

      • Eleonora Ghisoni
      • Matteo Morotti
      • George Coukos
      Review Article
    • Endometrial cancer is the commonest gynaecological cancer in economically developed countries, and both the incidence and mortality continue to increase. This increasing prevalence highlights the need for novel treatment approaches that will improve patient outcomes. In this Review, the authors describe the epidemiology and standard-of-care treatment approaches for patients with endometrial cancer, as well as highlighting the importance of understanding tumour biology and incorporating this knowledge into better-informed treatment strategies for specific subgroups of patients.

      • Jeffrey A. How
      • Amir A. Jazaeri
      • Karen H. Lu
      Review Article
    • Tumour mutational burden (TMB), reflecting the number of mutations present in the DNA of a tumour, is a biologically appealing biomarker of a response to immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). Nonetheless, the clinical predictive value of TMB for ICI response has thus far been mixed, with robust associations seen only for a few ICI-responsive cancer types. In this Review, the authors summarize the available data on TMB and discuss ongoing research efforts to improve the clinical utility of this biomarker.

      • Jan Budczies
      • Daniel Kazdal
      • Albrecht Stenzinger
      Review Article

Nature Careers

Science jobs

Advertisement