The potential of exploiting DNA-repair defects for optimizing lung cancer treatment
- 14 February 2012
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology
- Vol. 9 (3) , 144-155
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nrclinonc.2012.3
Abstract
The tumor genome is commonly aberrant as a consequence of mutagenic insult and incomplete DNA repair. DNA repair as a therapeutic target has recently received considerable attention owing to the promise of drugs that target tumor-specific DNA-repair enzymes and potentiate conventional cytotoxic therapy through mechanism-based approaches, such as synthetic lethality. Treatment for non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) consists mainly of platinum-based chemotherapy regimens and improvements are urgently needed. Optimizing treatment according to tumor status for DNA-repair biomarkers, such as ERCC1, BRCA1 or RRM1, could predict response to platinum, taxanes and gemcitabine-based therapies, respectively, and might improve substantially the response of individual patients' tumors. Finally, recent data on germline variation in DNA-repair genes may also be informative. Here, we discuss how a molecular and functional DNA-repair classification of NSCLC may aid clinical decision making and improve patient outcome.Keywords
This publication has 107 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of endonuclease activity in human nucleotide excision repairDNA Repair, 2011
- A Platform for Rapid Detection of Multiple Oncogenic Mutations With Relevance to Targeted Therapy in Non–Small-Cell Lung CancerThe Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, 2011
- ERCC1 and RRM1 in the International Adjuvant Lung Trial by Automated Quantitative in Situ AnalysisThe American Journal of Pathology, 2011
- DNA Polymerases as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Cancers Deficient in the DNA Mismatch Repair Proteins MSH2 or MLH1Cancer Cell, 2010
- Synthetic lethal targeting of PTEN mutant cells with PARP inhibitorsEMBO Molecular Medicine, 2009
- Methotrexate induces oxidative DNA damage and is selectively lethal to tumour cells with defects in the DNA mismatch repair gene MSH2EMBO Molecular Medicine, 2009
- Double-strand breaks induce homologous recombinational repair of interstrand cross-links via cooperation of MSH2, ERCC1-XPF, REV3, and the Fanconi anemia pathwayDNA Repair, 2007
- The multifaceted mismatch-repair systemNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2006
- Hallmarks of 'BRCAness' in sporadic cancersNature Reviews Cancer, 2004
- Mechanism and regulation of human non-homologous DNA end-joiningNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2003