Abstract Background The advent of rapid and inexpensive sequencing technology allows scientists to decipher heterogeneity within primary tumours, between primary and metastatic sites, and between metastases. Charting the evolutionary history of individual tumours has revealed drivers of tumour heterogeneity and highlighted its impact on therapeutic outcomes. Discussion Scientists are using improved sequencing technologies to characterise and address the challenge of tumour heterogeneity, which is a major cause of resistance to therapy and relapse. Heterogeneity may fuel metastasis through the selection of rare, aggressive, somatically altered cells. However, extreme levels of chromosomal instability, which contribute to intratumour heteroge...
Genomic instability is a major driver of intra-tumor heterogeneity. However, unstable genomes often ...
Metastatic disease is the main cause of cancer-related mortality due to almost universal therapeutic...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...
BACKGROUND: The advent of rapid and inexpensive sequencing technology allows scientists to decipher ...
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have revealed extensive intratumour heterogeneity (ITH) b...
Developments in genomic techniques have provided insight into the remarkable genetic complexity of m...
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have revealed extensive intratumour heterogeneity (ITH) b...
Unlike the great advances that have been made in reducing breast cancer mortality through the multid...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
© 2016 Federation of European Biochemical SocietiesCancer patients die primarily due to disease recu...
Cancer poses a significant health burden worldwide, with an estimated 19.3 million new cancer cases ...
Background Alternative methods are required to optimise the clinical insights that may be derived fr...
Therapeutic interventions in advanced cancers are often unsuccessful because not all cells in a tumo...
Originally described as interpatient variability, tumour heterogeneity has now been demonstrated to ...
Cancer related mortality is almost always due to metastatic dissemination of the primary disease. Wh...
Genomic instability is a major driver of intra-tumor heterogeneity. However, unstable genomes often ...
Metastatic disease is the main cause of cancer-related mortality due to almost universal therapeutic...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...
BACKGROUND: The advent of rapid and inexpensive sequencing technology allows scientists to decipher ...
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have revealed extensive intratumour heterogeneity (ITH) b...
Developments in genomic techniques have provided insight into the remarkable genetic complexity of m...
Recent advances in sequencing technologies have revealed extensive intratumour heterogeneity (ITH) b...
Unlike the great advances that have been made in reducing breast cancer mortality through the multid...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
© 2016 Federation of European Biochemical SocietiesCancer patients die primarily due to disease recu...
Cancer poses a significant health burden worldwide, with an estimated 19.3 million new cancer cases ...
Background Alternative methods are required to optimise the clinical insights that may be derived fr...
Therapeutic interventions in advanced cancers are often unsuccessful because not all cells in a tumo...
Originally described as interpatient variability, tumour heterogeneity has now been demonstrated to ...
Cancer related mortality is almost always due to metastatic dissemination of the primary disease. Wh...
Genomic instability is a major driver of intra-tumor heterogeneity. However, unstable genomes often ...
Metastatic disease is the main cause of cancer-related mortality due to almost universal therapeutic...
Tumours are not merely masses of abnormally proliferating cancer cells. Today, we have a clearer vie...