Rhabdomyosarcoma: current challenges and their implications for developing therapies

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) represents a rare, heterogeneous group of mesodermal malignancies with skeletal muscle differentiation. One major subgroup of RMS tumors (so-called "fusion-positive" tumors) carries exclusive chromosomal translocations that join the DNA-binding domain of the PAX3 or...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine 2014-11, Vol.4 (11), p.a025650-a025650
Hauptverfasser: Hettmer, Simone, Li, Zhizhong, Billin, Andrew N, Barr, Frederic G, Cornelison, D D W, Ehrlich, Alan R, Guttridge, Denis C, Hayes-Jordan, Andrea, Helman, Lee J, Houghton, Peter J, Khan, Javed, Langenau, David M, Linardic, Corinne M, Pal, Ranadip, Partridge, Terence A, Pavlath, Grace K, Rota, Rossella, Schäfer, Beat W, Shipley, Janet, Stillman, Bruce, Wexler, Leonard H, Wagers, Amy J, Keller, Charles
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) represents a rare, heterogeneous group of mesodermal malignancies with skeletal muscle differentiation. One major subgroup of RMS tumors (so-called "fusion-positive" tumors) carries exclusive chromosomal translocations that join the DNA-binding domain of the PAX3 or PAX7 gene to the transactivation domain of the FOXO1 (previously known as FKHR) gene. Fusion-negative RMS represents a heterogeneous spectrum of tumors with frequent RAS pathway activation. Overtly metastatic disease at diagnosis is more frequently found in individuals with fusion-positive than in those with fusion-negative tumors. RMS is the most common pediatric soft-tissue sarcoma, and approximately 60% of all children and adolescents diagnosed with RMS are cured by currently available multimodal therapies. However, a curative outcome is achieved in
ISSN:2157-1422
2472-5412
DOI:10.1101/cshperspect.a025650