An arranged marriage for precision medicine: hypoxia and genomic assays in localized prostate cancer radiotherapy.

R. G. Bristow*, A. Berlin, A. Dal Pra

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Prostate cancer (CaP) is the most commonly diagnosed malignancy in males in the Western world with one in six males diagnosed in their lifetime. Current clinical prognostication groupings use pathologic Gleason score, pre-treatment prostatic-specific antigen and Union for International Cancer Control-TNM staging to place patients with localized CaP into low-, intermediate- and high-risk categories. These categories represent an increasing risk of biochemical failure and CaP-specific mortality rates, they also reflect the need for increasing treatment intensity and justification for increased side effects. In this article, we point out that 30-50% of patients will still fail image-guided radiotherapy or surgery despite the judicious use of clinical risk categories owing to interpatient heterogeneity in treatment response. To improve treatment individualization, better predictors of prognosis and radiotherapy treatment response are needed to triage patients to bespoke and intensified CaP treatment protocols. These should include the use of pre-treatment genomic tests based on DNA or RNA indices and/or assays that reflect cancer metabolism, such as hypoxia assays, to define patient-specific CaP progression and aggression. More importantly, it is argued that these novel prognostic assays could be even more useful if combined together to drive forward precision cancer medicine for localized CaP.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)20130753
Number of pages1
JournalThe British journal of radiology
Volume87
Issue number1035
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Manchester Cancer Research Centre

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