Radiotherapy is a major treatment modality used to treat muscle-invasive bladder cancer, with patient outcomes similar to surgery. However, radioresistance is a significant factor in treatment failure. Cell-free extracts of muscle-invasive bladder tumors are defective in nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ), and this phenotype may be used clinically by combining radiotherapy with a radiosensitizing drug that targets homologous recombination, thereby sparing normal tissues with intact NHEJ. The response of the homologous recombination protein RAD51 to radiation is inhibited by the small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib. Stable RT112 bladder cancer Ku knockdown (Ku80KD) cells were generated using short hairpin RNA technology to mimic t...
This study aims at analyzing the impact of the pharmacological inhibition of DNA damage response (DD...
Personalised medicine aims to empower patients and clinicians to make informed choices in order to e...
Funding Information: This work was funded by Cancer Research UK (CRUK; C5255/A23755). J.L.R. was fun...
Radiotherapy is a major treatment modality used to treat muscle-invasive bladder cancer, with patien...
RAD51 is a key protein in the homologous recombination (HR) pathway of DNA double-strand break repai...
AbstractBackground and purposeIn muscle-invasive bladder cancer there is an urgent need to identify ...
Muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) has a poor prognosis. Currently, therapy consists of radical r...
Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity and local c...
Purpose: Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity an...
Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity and local c...
Radical radiotherapy is the principal bladder-preserving treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cance...
Purpose: Muscle-invasive bladder cancer has a 40% to 60% 5-year survival rate with radical treatment...
Given the promising control of bladder cancer achieved by combined chemotherapy/radiotherapy with se...
Radical cystectomy is the gold standard treatment for muscle invasive bladder cancer, but some patie...
International audienceBladder cancer is a common cancer; it is the tenth most common cancer in the w...
This study aims at analyzing the impact of the pharmacological inhibition of DNA damage response (DD...
Personalised medicine aims to empower patients and clinicians to make informed choices in order to e...
Funding Information: This work was funded by Cancer Research UK (CRUK; C5255/A23755). J.L.R. was fun...
Radiotherapy is a major treatment modality used to treat muscle-invasive bladder cancer, with patien...
RAD51 is a key protein in the homologous recombination (HR) pathway of DNA double-strand break repai...
AbstractBackground and purposeIn muscle-invasive bladder cancer there is an urgent need to identify ...
Muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) has a poor prognosis. Currently, therapy consists of radical r...
Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity and local c...
Purpose: Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity an...
Radiation therapy for invasive bladder cancer allows for organ preservation but toxicity and local c...
Radical radiotherapy is the principal bladder-preserving treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cance...
Purpose: Muscle-invasive bladder cancer has a 40% to 60% 5-year survival rate with radical treatment...
Given the promising control of bladder cancer achieved by combined chemotherapy/radiotherapy with se...
Radical cystectomy is the gold standard treatment for muscle invasive bladder cancer, but some patie...
International audienceBladder cancer is a common cancer; it is the tenth most common cancer in the w...
This study aims at analyzing the impact of the pharmacological inhibition of DNA damage response (DD...
Personalised medicine aims to empower patients and clinicians to make informed choices in order to e...
Funding Information: This work was funded by Cancer Research UK (CRUK; C5255/A23755). J.L.R. was fun...