Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets

Through novel methodologies, including both basic and clinical research, progress has been made in the therapy of solid cancer. Recent innovations in anticancer therapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitor biologics, therapeutic vaccines, small drugs, and CAR-T cell injections, mark a new epoch...

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Main Author: Zlatko Dembic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/23/5776
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spelling doaj-9eef422eb38c4a62a73e69765cb1e42b2020-12-08T00:04:32ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492020-12-01255776577610.3390/molecules25235776Antitumor Drugs and Their TargetsZlatko Dembic0Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Department of Oral Biology, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Oslo, 0316 Oslo, NorwayThrough novel methodologies, including both basic and clinical research, progress has been made in the therapy of solid cancer. Recent innovations in anticancer therapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitor biologics, therapeutic vaccines, small drugs, and CAR-T cell injections, mark a new epoch in cancer research, already known for faster (epi-)genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics. As the long-sought after personalization of cancer therapies comes to fruition, the need to evaluate all current therapeutic possibilities and select the best for each patient is of paramount importance. This is a novel task for medical care that deserves prominence in therapeutic considerations in the future. This is because cancer is a complex genetic disease. In its deadly form, metastatic cancer, it includes altered genes (and their regulators) that encode ten hallmarks of cancer-independent growth, dodging apoptosis, immortalization, multidrug resistance, neovascularization, invasiveness, genome instability, inflammation, deregulation of metabolism, and avoidance of destruction by the immune system. These factors have been known targets for many anticancer drugs and treatments, and their modulation is a therapeutic goal, with the hope of rendering solid cancer a chronic rather than deadly disease. In this article, the current therapeutic arsenal against cancers is reviewed with a focus on immunotherapies.https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/23/5776cancerchemotherapybiologicsimmunotherapycancer hallmarksimmune system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zlatko Dembic
spellingShingle Zlatko Dembic
Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
Molecules
cancer
chemotherapy
biologics
immunotherapy
cancer hallmarks
immune system
author_facet Zlatko Dembic
author_sort Zlatko Dembic
title Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
title_short Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
title_full Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
title_fullStr Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
title_full_unstemmed Antitumor Drugs and Their Targets
title_sort antitumor drugs and their targets
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Through novel methodologies, including both basic and clinical research, progress has been made in the therapy of solid cancer. Recent innovations in anticancer therapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitor biologics, therapeutic vaccines, small drugs, and CAR-T cell injections, mark a new epoch in cancer research, already known for faster (epi-)genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics. As the long-sought after personalization of cancer therapies comes to fruition, the need to evaluate all current therapeutic possibilities and select the best for each patient is of paramount importance. This is a novel task for medical care that deserves prominence in therapeutic considerations in the future. This is because cancer is a complex genetic disease. In its deadly form, metastatic cancer, it includes altered genes (and their regulators) that encode ten hallmarks of cancer-independent growth, dodging apoptosis, immortalization, multidrug resistance, neovascularization, invasiveness, genome instability, inflammation, deregulation of metabolism, and avoidance of destruction by the immune system. These factors have been known targets for many anticancer drugs and treatments, and their modulation is a therapeutic goal, with the hope of rendering solid cancer a chronic rather than deadly disease. In this article, the current therapeutic arsenal against cancers is reviewed with a focus on immunotherapies.
topic cancer
chemotherapy
biologics
immunotherapy
cancer hallmarks
immune system
url https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/25/23/5776
work_keys_str_mv AT zlatkodembic antitumordrugsandtheirtargets
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