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Critical questions in ovarian cancer research and treatment: Report of an American Association for Cancer Research Special Conference

Authors :
Claudia Iavarone
Roger A. Greenberg
Kaiyang Zhang
Douglas A. Levine
Josephine Walton
Brad H. Nelson
Kunle Odunsi
Francesmary Modugno
David R. Spriggs
Robert L. Coleman
Monicka Wielgos-Bonvallet
Zhen Lu
Darren Ennis
Robert P. Edwards
Ronny Drapkin
Ie Ming Shih
David G. Huntsman
Joan S. Brugge
Jessica A. Pilsworth
Daniel J. Powell
Kevin M. Elias
Andrew Futreal
Anil K. Sood
Lee Zou
Ursula A. Matulonis
Ahmed Ashour Ahmed
Robert Rottapel
Kai Doberstein
Giulio Draetta
David M. Gershenson
David D.L. Bowtell
James D. Brenton
Mark A. Eckert
Christopher J. Lord
Ernst Lengyel
Elise C. Kohn
Jennifer X Ji
Frances R. Balkwill
Gordon B. Mills
Robert C. Bast
Adaobi E. Amobi
Li Shen
Rugang Zhang
Source :
Cancer
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Substantial progress has been made in understanding ovarian cancer at the molecular and cellular level. Significant improvement in 5-year survival has been achieved through cytoreductive surgery, combination platinum-based chemotherapy, and more effective treatment of recurrent cancer, and there are now more than 280,000 ovarian cancer survivors in the United States. Despite these advances, long-term survival in late-stage disease has improved little over the last 4 decades. Poor outcomes relate, in part, to late stage at initial diagnosis, intrinsic drug resistance, and the persistence of dormant drug-resistant cancer cells after primary surgery and chemotherapy. Our ability to accelerate progress in the clinic will depend on the ability to answer several critical questions regarding this disease. To assess current answers, an American Association for Cancer Research Special Conference on "Critical Questions in Ovarian Cancer Research and Treatment" was held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on October 1-3, 2017. Although clinical, translational, and basic investigators conducted much of the discussion, advocates participated in the meeting, and many presentations were directly relevant to patient care, including treatment with poly adenosine diphosphate ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors, attempts to improve immunotherapy by overcoming the immune suppressive effects of the microenvironment, and a better understanding of the heterogeneity of the disease.

Details

ISSN :
10970142
Volume :
125
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....397dbdd63bbc770344c9cc5667559597