Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Evolution of Gastric Cancer Treatment: From the Golden Age of Surgery to an Era of Precision Medicine
Yonsei Medical Journal ; : 1177-1185, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-115931
ABSTRACT
Gastric cancer imposes a global health burden. Although multimodal therapies have proven to benefit patients with advanced diseases after curative surgery, the prognosis of most advanced cancer patients still needs to be improved. Surgical extirpation is the mainstay of gastric cancer treatment. Indeed, without curative surgery, variations and combinations of chemotherapy and/or radiation cannot bring clinically meaningful success. Centered around D2 surgery, adjuvant and peri-operative multimodal therapies have improved survival in a certain group of gastric cancer patients. Moving toward a personalized cancer therapy era, molecular targeted strategies have been tested in clinical trials for gastric cancer. With some success and failures, we have learned valuable lessons regarding the biology of gastric cancer and the clinical relevance of biological therapies in addition to conventional treatments. Future treatment of gastric cancer will be shifted to molecularly tailored and genome information-based personalized therapy. Collaboration across disciplines and actively adopting emerging anti-cancer strategies, along with in-depth understanding of molecular and genetic underpinnings of tumor development and progression, are imperative to realizing personalized therapy for gastric cancer. Although many challenges remain to be overcome, we envision that the era of precision cancer medicine for gastric cancer has already arrived and anticipate that current knowledge and discoveries will be transformed into near-future clinical practice for managing gastric cancer patients.
Subject(s)

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Prognosis / Stomach Neoplasms / Combined Modality Therapy / Precision Medicine / Gastrectomy Type of study: Prognostic study Limits: Female / Humans Language: English Journal: Yonsei Medical Journal Year: 2015 Type: Article

Similar

MEDLINE

...
LILACS

LIS

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Prognosis / Stomach Neoplasms / Combined Modality Therapy / Precision Medicine / Gastrectomy Type of study: Prognostic study Limits: Female / Humans Language: English Journal: Yonsei Medical Journal Year: 2015 Type: Article