Publications by authors named "Marie Rajtmajerova"

Article Synopsis
  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a type of primary liver cancer often found in advanced stages, making treatment difficult; microRNAs (miRNAs) are shown to play significant roles in regulating gene expression related to cancer progression.
  • Certain miRNAs are specifically expressed in HCC tissues and are critical in regulating key signaling pathways, highlighting their potential for improving diagnosis and treatment options for the disease.
  • Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are also essential in HCC development, contributing to processes like cell proliferation and metastasis through interactions with DNA and proteins, forming networks with miRNAs that influence cancer cell behavior.
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As the current staging and grading systems are not sufficient to stratify patients for therapy and predict the outcome of the disease, there is an urgent need to understand cancer in its complexity. The mutual relationship between tumour and immune or stromal cells leads to rapid evolution and subsequent genetic and epigenetic changes. Immunoscore has been introduced as a diagnostic tool for colorectal cancer (CRC) only recently, emphasising the role of the specific tumor microenvironment in patient's prognosis and overall outcome.

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Urothelial carcinoma is a tumor type featuring pronounced intertumoral heterogeneity and a high mutational and epigenetic load. The two major histopathological urothelial carcinoma types - the non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma - markedly differ in terms of their respective typical mutational profiles and also by their probable cells of origin, that is, a urothelial basal cell for muscle-invasive carcinomas and a urothelial intermediate cell for at least a large part of non-muscle-invasive carcinomas. Both non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive urothelial carcinomas can be further classified into discrete intrinsic subtypes based on their typical transcriptomic profiles.

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