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Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Messerschmidt, JL; Bhattacharya, P; Messerschmidt, GL
Published in: Current oncology reports
August 2017

The knowledge base of malignant cell growth and resulting targets is rapidly increasing every day. Clonal theory is essential to understand the changes required for a cell to become malignant. These changes are then clues to therapeutic intervention strategies. Immune system optimization is a critical piece to find, recognize, and eliminate all cancer cells from the host. Only by administering (1) multiple therapies that counteract the cancer cell's mutational and externally induced survival traits and (2) by augmenting the immune system to combat immune suppression processes and by enhancing specific tumor trait recognition can cancer begin to be treated with a truly targeted focus.Since the sequencing of the human genome during the 1990s, steady progress in understanding genetic alterations and gene product functions are being unraveled. In cancer, this is proceeding very fast and demonstrates that genetic mutations occur very rapidly to allow for selection of survival traits within various cancer clones. Hundreds of mutations have been identified in single individual cancers, but spread across many clones in the patient's body. Precision oncology will require accurate measurement of these cancer survival-benefiting mutations to develop strategies for effective therapy. Inhibiting these cellular mechanisms is a first step, but these malignant cells need to be eliminated by the host's mechanisms, which we are learning to direct more specifically. Cancer is one of the most complicated cellular aberrations humans have encountered. Rapidly developing significant survival traits require prompt, repeated, and total body measurements of these attributes to effectively develop multi-agent treatment of the individual's malignancy. Focused drug development to inhibit these beneficial mutations is critical to slowing cancer cell growth and, perhaps, triggering apoptosis. In many cases, activation and targeting of the immune system to kill the remaining malignant cells is essential to a cure.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Current oncology reports

DOI

EISSN

1534-6269

ISSN

1523-3790

Publication Date

August 2017

Volume

19

Issue

10

Start / End Page

66

Related Subject Headings

  • Oncology & Carcinogenesis
  • Neoplasms
  • Mutation
  • Humans
  • Clonal Evolution
  • Cell Transformation, Neoplastic
  • Apoptosis
  • 3211 Oncology and carcinogenesis
  • 1112 Oncology and Carcinogenesis
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Messerschmidt, J. L., Bhattacharya, P., & Messerschmidt, G. L. (2017). Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics. Current Oncology Reports, 19(10), 66. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11912-017-0625-2
Messerschmidt, Jonathan L., Prianka Bhattacharya, and Gerald L. Messerschmidt. “Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics.Current Oncology Reports 19, no. 10 (August 2017): 66. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11912-017-0625-2.
Messerschmidt JL, Bhattacharya P, Messerschmidt GL. Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics. Current oncology reports. 2017 Aug;19(10):66.
Messerschmidt, Jonathan L., et al. “Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics.Current Oncology Reports, vol. 19, no. 10, Aug. 2017, p. 66. Epmc, doi:10.1007/s11912-017-0625-2.
Messerschmidt JL, Bhattacharya P, Messerschmidt GL. Cancer Clonal Theory, Immune Escape, and Their Evolving Roles in Cancer Multi-Agent Therapeutics. Current oncology reports. 2017 Aug;19(10):66.
Journal cover image

Published In

Current oncology reports

DOI

EISSN

1534-6269

ISSN

1523-3790

Publication Date

August 2017

Volume

19

Issue

10

Start / End Page

66

Related Subject Headings

  • Oncology & Carcinogenesis
  • Neoplasms
  • Mutation
  • Humans
  • Clonal Evolution
  • Cell Transformation, Neoplastic
  • Apoptosis
  • 3211 Oncology and carcinogenesis
  • 1112 Oncology and Carcinogenesis