癌症患者微小残留疾病的检测:技术、临床意义和新出现的治疗结果的回顾。

Cancer detection and prevention Pub Date : 2000-01-01
W J Köstler, T Brodowicz, M Hejna, C Wiltschke, C C Zielinski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的十年中,微小残留病(MRD)的问题被广泛讨论,其表现为早期恶性肿瘤患者或临床完全缓解患者的组织和自体造血移植中存在未检测到的弥散性分离肿瘤细胞。根据目前对恶性肿瘤发病机制的了解,在常规肿瘤治疗方式或被污染的自体造血细胞回输后,弥散性肿瘤细胞持续存在是随后疾病复发的来源。因此,无论在基础研究还是临床研究中,对弥散性分离肿瘤细胞的检测和表征都非常重视。这项工作旨在更好地了解转移和肿瘤休眠的过程,并最终评估预后、分子监测和设计新的肿瘤治疗药物。在我们的综述中,我们使用计算机(MEDLINE, Embase)和人工搜索来总结有关MRD的实验室和临床数据,重点关注实体恶性肿瘤的MRD问题。我们详细概述了用于弥散性肿瘤细胞检测和分子表征的方法,以及MRD检测在患者和自体造血移植中的患病率和预后意义。最后,我们讨论了弥散性肿瘤细胞检测的新治疗结果,特别强调了抗体的治疗潜力。我们的结论是,MRD的检测代表了未来临床试验中恶性疾病的诊断、监测和治疗的标志。
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Detection of minimal residual disease in patients with cancer: a review of techniques, clinical implications, and emerging therapeutic consequences.

The issue of minimal residual disease (MRD) manifesting itself by the presence of undetected disseminated isolated tumor cells in both tissues and hematopoietic autografts from patients with early-stage malignancies or from patients in clinical complete remission has been discussed widely during the last decade. Based on the current understanding of the pathogenesis of malignancy, disseminated tumor cells persisting after conventional oncologic treatment modalities or after reinfusion of contaminated autologous hematopoietic cells constitute the source of subsequent recurrence of disease. Accordingly, much emphasis is placed on the detection and characterization of disseminated isolated tumor cells in both basic and clinical research. This effort is aimed at a better understanding of the processes of metastasis and tumor dormancy and, ultimately, the estimation of prognosis, molecular monitoring, and the design of new therapeutic agents in oncology. In our review, we used computerized (MEDLINE, Embase) and manual searches to summarize laboratory and clinical data concerning MRD focusing on the issue of MRD in solid malignancies. We give a detailed overview of the methods used for the detection and molecular characterization of disseminated tumor cells and of the prevalence and prognostic significance of the detection of MRD in patients and hematopoietic autografts. Finally, we discuss the emerging therapeutic consequences of the detection of disseminated tumor cells, with special emphasis on the therapeutic potential of antibodies. We conclude that the detection of MRD represents a hallmark for the diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment of malignant conditions in future clinical trials.

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