Circulating tumor DNA in early‐stage breast cancer: personalized biomarkers for occult metastatic disease and risk of relapse?

  • af Hällström T
  • Puhka M
  • Kallioniemi O
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Abstract

The availability of blood-based markers to predict response of a solid tumor to treatment, estimate patient prognosis and diagnose relapse well before clinical symptoms arise, is a long-standing hope in clinical oncology. Ideally, assays designed to provide such information should be inexpensive (at least in the foreseeable future), simple, and, of course, predictive of the clinical evolution of the disease. While early research focused on circulating glycosylated tumor-derived protein biomarkers, the focus is now rapidly shifting to new opportunities, such as circulating tumor cells, extracellular vesicles, micro-RNAs and cancer-derived cell-free DNA a.k.a. circulating tumor-derived DNA (ctDNA).

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af Hällström, T. M., Puhka, M., & Kallioniemi, O. (2015). Circulating tumor DNA in early‐stage breast cancer: personalized biomarkers for occult metastatic disease and risk of relapse? EMBO Molecular Medicine, 7(8), 994–995. https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201505332

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