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Most cancer-related deaths are attributable to metastasis, but few treatments are specifically designed to disrupt this process. In this Position Paper, representatives of the joint Cancer Research UK and Cancer Therapeutics CRC Australia Metastasis Working Group describe the challenges associated with discovering and developing anticancer agents designed specifically to prevent or delay the metastatic outgrowth of cancer and provide guidance on how these challenges might be overcome.
Precision medicine approaches to the treatment of cancer are largely reliant on genomic analysis alone. In this Perspective the authors provide a rationale for the incorporation of analysis of the proteome, which is a rich source of biological heterogeneity, into the treatment and management of patients with cancer.
Integrating molecular nuclear imaging in clinical research has great potential to improve anticancer therapy, particularly through the development of imaging biomarkers. Herein, the multistage process of developing novel molecular imaging biomarkers is discussed, highlighting both the challenges that have restricted the use of molecular imaging in clinical oncology research and future opportunities in this area.
The International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP)–Paediatric Oncology in Developing Countries (PODC) Collaborative Wilms Tumour Africa project delivered treatment in eight centres across five countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Setting up a collaboration like this is easier said than done, and herein we share the lessons we learned along the way.
Broad population screening of asymptomatic individuals for cancers of the prostate or thyroid has resulted in overdiagnosis and overtreatment. Herein, the authors describe the epidemiology, pathology, and screening guidelines for the management of patients with those cancers, and discuss existing international active surveillance protocols.