Breast cancer stem cells: treatment resistance and therapeutic opportunities

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Author(s)
Al-Ejeh, Fares
Smart, Chanel E
Morrison, Brian J
Chenevix-Trench, Georgia
Lopez, J Alejandro
Lakhani, Sunil R
Brown, Michael P
Khanna, Kum Kum
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2011
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The clinical and pathologic heterogeneity of human breast cancer has long been recognized. Now, molecular profiling has enriched our understanding of breast cancer heterogeneity and yielded new prognostic and predictive information. Despite recent therapeutic advances, including the HER2-specific agent, trastuzumab, locoregional and systemic disease recurrence remain an ever-present threat to the health and well being of breast cancer survivors. By definition, disease recurrence originates from residual treatmentresistant cells, which regenerate at least the initial breast cancer phenotype. The discovery of the normal breast ...
View more >The clinical and pathologic heterogeneity of human breast cancer has long been recognized. Now, molecular profiling has enriched our understanding of breast cancer heterogeneity and yielded new prognostic and predictive information. Despite recent therapeutic advances, including the HER2-specific agent, trastuzumab, locoregional and systemic disease recurrence remain an ever-present threat to the health and well being of breast cancer survivors. By definition, disease recurrence originates from residual treatmentresistant cells, which regenerate at least the initial breast cancer phenotype. The discovery of the normal breast stem cell has reignited interest in the identity and properties of breast cancer stem-like cells and the relationship of these cells to the repopulating ability of treatment-resistant cells. The cancer stem cell model of breast cancer development contrasts with the clonal evolution model, whereas the mixed model draws on features of both. Although the origin and identity of breast cancer stem-like cells is contentious, treatment-resistant cells survive and propagate only because aberrant and potentially druggable signaling pathways are recruited. As a means to increase the rates of breast cancer cure, several approaches to specific targeting of the treatmentresistant cell population exist and include methods for addressing the problem of radioresistance in particular.
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View more >The clinical and pathologic heterogeneity of human breast cancer has long been recognized. Now, molecular profiling has enriched our understanding of breast cancer heterogeneity and yielded new prognostic and predictive information. Despite recent therapeutic advances, including the HER2-specific agent, trastuzumab, locoregional and systemic disease recurrence remain an ever-present threat to the health and well being of breast cancer survivors. By definition, disease recurrence originates from residual treatmentresistant cells, which regenerate at least the initial breast cancer phenotype. The discovery of the normal breast stem cell has reignited interest in the identity and properties of breast cancer stem-like cells and the relationship of these cells to the repopulating ability of treatment-resistant cells. The cancer stem cell model of breast cancer development contrasts with the clonal evolution model, whereas the mixed model draws on features of both. Although the origin and identity of breast cancer stem-like cells is contentious, treatment-resistant cells survive and propagate only because aberrant and potentially druggable signaling pathways are recruited. As a means to increase the rates of breast cancer cure, several approaches to specific targeting of the treatmentresistant cell population exist and include methods for addressing the problem of radioresistance in particular.
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Journal Title
Carcinogenesis
Volume
32
Issue
5
Copyright Statement
© 2011 Oxford University Press. This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Tree Physiology following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version: Breast cancer stem cells: treatment resistance and therapeutic opportunities, Carcinogenesis, Volume 32, Issue 5, 2011, Pages 650-658 is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgr028
Subject
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Cancer therapy (excl. chemotherapy and radiation therapy)