Urine could be a convenient source of biomarkers for different diseases and clinical applications, mostly for cancer diagnosis, prognosis, treatment monitoring, and prenatal diagnosis. The ultra-noninvasive sampling and the possibility to analyze large volume are the main undisputed advantages of urine-based protocols. Recent and comprehensive studies showed that urinary cell-free DNA (ucfDNA) is informative to identify the genomic signature of patients, resulting in a huge tool to track the tumor evolution and for personalized medicine in urological and non-urological cancer.In this chapter, we reported the main published evidences on ucfDNA, with the aim at discussing its promising and translatable role in clinical practices
Urothelial bladder cancers (UBCs) have heterogeneous clinical characteristics that are mirrored in t...
Over the past decade, advances in molecular biology and genomics techniques have revolutionized the ...
The increasing knowledge of the molecular pathogenesis of cancer and the rapid development of new mo...
Urine could be a convenient source of biomarkers for different diseases and clinical applications, m...
Introduction: Although the role of circulating cell free DNA in cancer has been widely demonstrated,...
Urine cell-free (UCF) DNA has recently been proposed as a potential marker for early bladder cancer ...
Circulating cell-free DNA has been recognized as an accurate marker for the diagnosis of prostate ca...
Bladder cancer represents the most common malignancy of the uropoetic tract. Its incidence has been ...
Urine cell-free DNA is an important source of diagnostic markers for different diseases (e.g., cance...
Introduction. The detection of tumor-specific markers in urine has paved the way for new early nonin...
Copyright © 2013 Valentina Casadio et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creat...
BACKGROUND: The current methodology used to detect, diagnose, and monitor many types of cancers requ...
Abstract Urothelial bladder carcinoma (UBC) is characterized by a large number of genetic alteration...
Early detection of primary bladder cancer (BCa) is vital, because stage and grade have been generall...
There is a need for informative biomarkers in localised urological cancers. At present, no method ca...
Urothelial bladder cancers (UBCs) have heterogeneous clinical characteristics that are mirrored in t...
Over the past decade, advances in molecular biology and genomics techniques have revolutionized the ...
The increasing knowledge of the molecular pathogenesis of cancer and the rapid development of new mo...
Urine could be a convenient source of biomarkers for different diseases and clinical applications, m...
Introduction: Although the role of circulating cell free DNA in cancer has been widely demonstrated,...
Urine cell-free (UCF) DNA has recently been proposed as a potential marker for early bladder cancer ...
Circulating cell-free DNA has been recognized as an accurate marker for the diagnosis of prostate ca...
Bladder cancer represents the most common malignancy of the uropoetic tract. Its incidence has been ...
Urine cell-free DNA is an important source of diagnostic markers for different diseases (e.g., cance...
Introduction. The detection of tumor-specific markers in urine has paved the way for new early nonin...
Copyright © 2013 Valentina Casadio et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creat...
BACKGROUND: The current methodology used to detect, diagnose, and monitor many types of cancers requ...
Abstract Urothelial bladder carcinoma (UBC) is characterized by a large number of genetic alteration...
Early detection of primary bladder cancer (BCa) is vital, because stage and grade have been generall...
There is a need for informative biomarkers in localised urological cancers. At present, no method ca...
Urothelial bladder cancers (UBCs) have heterogeneous clinical characteristics that are mirrored in t...
Over the past decade, advances in molecular biology and genomics techniques have revolutionized the ...
The increasing knowledge of the molecular pathogenesis of cancer and the rapid development of new mo...