Front Immunol
February 2024
Background: Consolidative thoracic radiotherapy (TRT) has been commonly used in the management of extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC). Nevertheless, phase III trials exploring first-line chemoimmunotherapy have excluded this treatment approach. However, there is a strong biological rationale to support the use of radiotherapy (RT) as a boost to sustain anti-tumor immune responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeoadjuvant therapy is a cornerstone of some early and locally advanced breast cancer treatment. The use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in fact, allows to obtain numerous advantages, including allowing a more conservative intervention, evaluating the in vivo response to therapy, modulating the intensity of subsequent treatments based on the degree of response to therapy and allowing to surgery with information on genetics. However, at the end of neoadjuvant cytotoxic therapy it is not possible to carry out surgery immediately, as a certain amount of time is required for recovery from toxicity, especially haematological, due to the systemic therapy itself.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aim: Triple-negative breast cancers represent 15% of all mammary malignancies and encompass several entities with different genomic characteristics. Among these, luminal androgen receptor (LAR) tumors express the androgen receptor (AR) and are characterized by a genomic profile which resembles luminal breast cancers. Moreover, LAR malignancies are usually enriched in PIK3CA, KMTC, CDH, NF1, and AKT1 alterations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSarcomas are mesenchymal-derived cancers with overlapping clinical and pathologic features and a remarkable histological heterogeneity. While a precise diagnosis is often challenging to achieve, systemic treatment of sarcomas is still quite uniform. In this scenario, next generation sequencing (NGS) may be exploited to assist diagnosis and to identify specific targetable alterations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone is one of the most common metastatic sites in metastatic breast cancer (mBC). The presence of bone metastases can lead to various complications including pain, spinal cord compression, hypercalcaemia, pathological fractures. The treatment of bone metastases of breast cancer (BC) is mainly based on the biological characteristics of the primary tumour, but there are also specific treatments for bone lesions including bone modifiers, radionuclides, or localized treatments such as radiotherapy, surgery or vertebroplasty.
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