Glioblastoma multiforme: a review of therapeutic targets.
Kanu OO, Mehta A, Di C, Lin N, Bortoff K, Bigner DD, Yan H, Adamson DC.
Expert
Opin Ther Targets. 2009 Jun;13(6):701-18.
Duke and Durham VAMC, Neurosurgery, DUMC
Box 2624, NC 27710, USA.
Glioblastoma is the commonest primary brain tumor, as well
as the deadliest. Malignant gliomas such as glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)
present some of the greatest challenges in the management of cancer patients
worldwide, despite notable recent achievements in oncology. Even with
aggressive surgical resections using state-of-the-art preoperative and
intraoperative neuroimaging, along with recent advances in radiotherapy and
chemotherapy, the prognosis for GBM patients remains dismal: survival after
diagnosis is about 1 year. Established prognostic factors are limited, but
include age, Karnofsky performance status, mini-mental status examination
score, O6-methylguanine methyltransferase promoter methylation and extent of
surgery. Standard treatment includes resection of > 95% of the tumor, followed
by concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Nevertheless, GBM research is
being conducted worldwide at a remarkable pace, in the laboratory and at the
bedside, with some of the more recent promising studies focused on
identification of aberrant genetic events and signaling pathways to develop
molecular-based targeted therapies, tumor stem cell identification and
characterization, modulation of tumor immunological responses and
understanding of the rare long-term survivors. With this universally fatal
disease, any small breakthrough will have a significant impact on survival and
provide hope to the thousands of patients who receive this diagnosis annually.
This review describes the epidemiology, clinical presentation, pathology and
tumor immunology, with a focus on understanding the molecular biology that
underlies the current targeted therapeutics being tested.