Molecular alterations associated with osteosarcoma development

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Abstract

Osteosarcoma is the most frequent malignant primary bone tumor characterized by a high potency to form lung metastases which is the main cause of death. Unfortunately, the conventional chemotherapy is not fully effective on osteosarcoma metastases. The progression of a primary tumor to metastasis requires multiple processes, which are neovascularization, proliferation, invasion, survival in the bloodstream, apoptosis resistance, arrest at a distant organ, and outgrowth in secondary sites. Consequently, recent studies have revealed new insights into the molecular mechanisms of metastasis development. The understanding of the mechanism of molecular alterations can provide the identification of novel therapeutic targets and/or prognostic markers for osteosarcoma treatment to improve the clinical outcome. © 2012 Kosei Ando et al.

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Ando, K., Mori, K., Verrecchia, F., Marc, B., Rédini, F., & Heymann, D. (2012). Molecular alterations associated with osteosarcoma development. Sarcoma. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/523432

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