Targeting the DNA Damage Response for the Treatment of High Risk Neuroblastoma

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Abstract

Despite intensive multimodal therapy, the survival rate for high risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB) remains <50%. Most cases initially respond to treatment but almost half will subsequently relapse with aggressive treatment resistant disease. Novel treatments exploiting the molecular pathology of NB and/or overcoming resistance to current genotoxic therapies are needed before survival rates can significantly improve. DNA damage response (DDR) defects are frequently observed in HR-NB including allelic deletion and loss of function mutations in key DDR genes, oncogene induced replication stress and cell cycle checkpoint dysfunction. Exploiting defects in the DDR has been a successful treatment strategy in some adult cancers. Here we review the genetic features of HR-NB which lead to DDR defects and the emerging molecular targeting agents to exploit them.

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Southgate, H. E. D., Chen, L., Curtin, N. J., & Tweddle, D. A. (2020, April 3). Targeting the DNA Damage Response for the Treatment of High Risk Neuroblastoma. Frontiers in Oncology. Frontiers Media S.A. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.00371

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