Towards personalized medicine: Non-coding rnas and endometrial cancer

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Abstract

Endometrial cancer (EC) is the most frequent female cancer associated with excellent prognosis if diagnosed at an early stage. The risk factors on which clinical staging is based are constantly updated and genetic and epigenetic characteristics have recently been emerging as prognostic markers. The evidence shows that non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) play a fundamental role in various biological processes associated with the pathogenesis of EC and many of them also have a prognosis prediction function, of remarkable importance in defining the therapeutic and surveillance path of EC patients. Personalized medicine focuses on the continuous updating of risk factors that are identifiable early during the EC staging to tailor treatments to patients. This review aims to show a summary of the current classification systems and to encourage the integration of various risk factors, introducing the prognostic role of non-coding RNAs, to avoid aggressive therapies where not necessary and to treat and strictly monitor subjects at greater risk of relapse.

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Cavaliere, A. F., Perelli, F., Zaami, S., Piergentili, R., Mattei, A., Vizzielli, G., … Signore, F. (2021, August 1). Towards personalized medicine: Non-coding rnas and endometrial cancer. Healthcare (Switzerland). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9080965

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