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Volume 10 Issue 1, January 2013

Research Highlight

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News & Views

  • A phase II trial comparing dual MAPK pathway inhibition by combining BRAF and MEK inhibitors with BRAF inhibition alone showed increased progression-free survival and reduced incidence of secondary malignancies in patients with mutant BRAF V600 melanoma. This trial provides strong support for developing combinations hitting the same pathway in melanoma.

    • Keiran S. M. Smalley
    • Vernon K. Sondak
    News & Views
  • An update of the COU-AA-301 study confirms a survival advantage with abiraterone–prednisone compared to prednisone in post-docetaxel patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. We place these data in the context of earlier disease states and other novel agents and explore practical issues concerning the future use of abiraterone.

    • Oliver Sartor
    • Sumanta K. Pal
    News & Views
  • Patients with colorectal cancer with mutated PIK3CA, identified from two large observational cohorts, had increased cancer-specific and overall survival if they used aspirin regularly after diagnosis compared to non-users. No effect of aspirin was seen in patients with wild-type PIK3CA. Mutated PIK3CA might be a useful biomarker to select patients who would benefit from adjuvant aspirin therapy.

    • Ruth E. Langley
    • Peter M. Rothwell
    News & Views
  • The VELOUR and VITAL studies recently demonstrated ziv-aflibercept improved overall survival in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), including those previously treated with bevacizumab, but did not improve overall survival in non-small-cell lung cancer. Thus, VEGF-directed agents might be useful throughout the continuum of care in mCRC, but biomarkers are needed to identify patients likely to benefit.

    • Jeffrey M. Clarke
    • Herbert I. Hurwitz
    News & Views
  • Preoperative 5-fluorouracil-based chemoradiation with optimal surgery provides very effective local control in locally advanced rectal cancer. Does adding oxaliplatin as a radiosensitizer provide any additional benefit? Is more always better?

    • Rob L. H. Jansen
    • Geerard L. Beets
    News & Views
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Review Article

  • Glioblastomas are difficult to treat, and patients have a poor prognosis. Knowledge of the molecular pathogenesis of glioma has launched an era of targeted-therapies, which are discussed in this Review article. Biomarkers, novel trial design, and the identification of molecular subgroups are other advances that are explored here.

    • Shota Tanaka
    • David N. Louis
    • Jorg Dietrich
    Review Article
  • The emergence of individualized medicine has spurred the need for the development of clinical decision-support systems (CDSSs) based on prediction models of treatment outcome. In radiation oncology, CDSSs combine clinical, imaging and molecular factors to achieve the highest accuracy to predict tumour response. Here, the authors provide an overview of these factors—including survival, recurrence patterns and toxicity—and discuss the methodology behind the multistage development of CDSSs.

    • Philippe Lambin
    • Ruud G. P. M. van Stiphout
    • Andre Dekker
    Review Article
  • Tumour dormancy is when cancer sleeps undetected for periods that can last up to decades. The therapeutic potential of inducing or maintaining this dormant period is clear. This Review describes the mechanisms of dormancy and uses genitourinary cancers as models to demonstrate how dormancy principles could be exploited clinically.

    • Jonathan A. Hensel
    • Thomas W. Flaig
    • Dan Theodorescu
    Review Article
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Timeline

  • Radiotherapy has been driven by constant technological advances since the discovery of X rays in 1895. This Timeline article covers the history of radiotherapy and focuses on the advances of major importance in the past two decades. These changes have provided clinical benefit for patients with cancer.

    • Juliette Thariat
    • Jean-Michel Hannoun-Levi
    • Jean-Pierre Gérard
    Timeline
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