Publications by authors named "L F Stancato"

Background: Childhood cancer is still a leading cause of death around the world. To improve outcomes, there is an urgent need for tailored treatment. The systematic evaluation of existing preclinical data can provide an overview of what is known and identify gaps in the current knowledge.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Owing to the high numbers of paediatric cancer-related deaths, advances in therapeutic options for childhood cancer is a heavily studied field, especially over the past decade. Classical chemotherapy offers some therapeutic benefit but has proven long-term complications in survivors, and there is an urgent need to identify novel target-driven therapies. Replication stress is a major cause of genomic instability in cancer, triggering the stalling of the replication fork.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Cancer is the leading cause of disease-related death in children, with limited treatment options available for those who experience relapses after initial therapies, due to insufficient molecular data and models.
  • - Recent changes in regulations by the European Medicines Agency and the FDA aim to boost preclinical pediatric cancer research, highlighting a growing need for better treatment options.
  • - An international meeting resulted in recommendations for standardized preclinical testing requirements and guidelines for developing innovative therapies for pediatric solid tumors, based on existing research initiatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Children with cancer face high relapse and mortality rates, prompting the need for new therapies, particularly through repurposing existing targeted drugs from adult treatments.
  • A systematic review strategy called Target Actionability Review (TAR) was developed to evaluate the effectiveness of available preclinical data for specific cancer targets in paediatric patients.
  • A pilot study focused on the MDM2 and TP53 targets revealed insights into drug development opportunities for certain paediatric tumours and identified areas needing further preclinical research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Changes in the regulatory environment affecting pediatric cancer drug development in the United States and the European Union provide unprecedented opportunity to advance the concept of precision medicine to children with cancer. Increasing evidence suggests that new drugs and biologic products directed at molecular targets presumed to be etiologically associated with many adult cancers may well provide therapeutic options for selected subsets of children with cancer despite their histologic and biologic differences. Regulatory requirements for early evaluation of appropriate new drugs for children based on their molecular mechanism of action, rather than the specific clinical indications for which they are developed and/or approved, will shorten the unacceptable time lag between first-in-human and first-in-children studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF