Aims: Cyclophosphamide was widely used as a single agent prior to the advent of platinum-based regimens for epithelial ovarian cancer, and, in combination with platinum, prior to the adoption of platinum and paclitaxel as standard first-line therapy. As cyclophosphamide currently has no defined role in ovarian cancer we aimed to assess its activity in women with recurrent disease.
Methods: A retrospective review was conducted of patients from three centers in Melbourne, Australia who had received oral cyclophosphamide treatment for recurrent ovarian cancer.
In melanoma, mutations in KIT are most frequent in acral and mucosal subtypes and rarely reported in cutaneous melanomas particularly those associated with intermittent UV exposure. Conversely melanomas arising within chronic sun damaged skin are considered to harbour KIT mutations at higher rates. To characterize the frequency of KIT mutations in a representative melanoma population, 261 patients from two Australian melanoma centres were prospectively screened for mutations in exons 11, 13 and 17 of the KIT gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer literature has consistently described autocrine loops involving growth factors to be important mechanisms for cellular transformation and proliferation in preclinical cancer models. Finally, convincing clinical data exist to implicate autocrine loops as central to the pathogenesis of a malignant condition, largely as a result of the recent development of inhibitors of protein tyrosine kinases important in cell signaling and growth. Although a rare condition, the study of patients with dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP) is enriched by data demonstrating strong scientific rationale for its pathogenesis and susceptibility to molecular-based therapies.
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