Detailed Information on Publication Record
2007
Molecular taxonomy and predictive systems of human cancers based on gene expression profiling.
SVOBODA, MarekBasic information
Original name
Molecular taxonomy and predictive systems of human cancers based on gene expression profiling.
Name in Czech
Molekulární taxonomie a prediktivní systémy lidských novotvarů založených na profilování genové exprese.
Authors
Edition
1. vyd. Brno, ANALYTICAL CYTOMETRY IV. BOOK OF ABSTRACTS. p. 80-80, 2007
Publisher
Česká společnost pro analytickou cytologii
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Stať ve sborníku
Field of Study
30200 3.2 Clinical medicine
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Organization unit
Faculty of Medicine
ISBN
978-80-239-9591-6
Keywords in English
molecular taxonomy;cancer;gene expression
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 17/12/2007 04:29, prof. MUDr. Marek Svoboda, Ph.D.
V originále
The diagnosis of malignancies is currently based on morphology and analysis of a few molecular markers of cancer cells. On the other hand, responses to treatment and clinical outcomes of patients within existent diagnostic categories are heterogeneous. What is the reason of this situation? The inadequacy of existing diagnostic methods or existing diagnostic categories? The complete elucidation of the human genome and the development of microarray technology have heralded a new era for biological sciences and medicine, particularly in cancer (Lander, 2001). Cancer is, in essence, a genetic disease. The DNA microarray technology represents a tool capable of both, simultaneously detecting and quantifying expression of tens of thousands of genes (expression profiling) in a very short period of time (Svoboda, 2004), thus provide for us molecular portrait and new insights into the biological processes underlying complex diseases such as cancer. Therefore, DNA microarrays are used to identify new molecular markers important for diagnostic and classification of many human cancers and prediction of treatment outcome (Sorlie, 2003). The aim of this presentation is to briefly review the analyses of two model malignancies studied in recent years, to illustrate the contribution of microarray technology to "personalized medicine". I will focus on diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), as a model of hematological malignancies, and breast cancer, as a model of solid tumors. In both cases, microarrays studies revealed new unexpected subgroups of the disease (e.g. "Germinal Center B-cell like DLBCL" vs "Activated B-cell like DLBCL", and "Basal-like", "Luminal-like A" and "Luminal-like B" breast cancer), and this stratification was correlated with the response to therapy and patients survival. In both cases, the extrapolation of these findings to more timely efficient and cost-effective methods, such as immunohistochemistry, is recently implemented in successive steps into clinical practice (Svoboda, 2006a, Svoboda, 2006b).
In Czech
Publikace je pouze v anglickém jazyce.
Links
NR9076, research and development project |
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