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Abstract
"The
high mortality rate caused by ovarian cancer has not changed for the
past thirty years. Although most patients diagnosed with this disease
respond to cytoreductive surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy and
undergo remission, foci of cells almost always escape therapy, manage to
survive, and acquire the capacity to repopulate the tumor. Repopulation
of ovarian cancer cells that escape front-line chemotherapy, however,
is a poorly understood phenomenon. Here I analyze cancer-initiating
cells, transitory senescence, reverse ploidy, and cellular dormancy as
putative players in ovarian cancer cell repopulation. Under standard of
care, ovarian cancer patients do not receive treatment between primary
cytotoxic therapy and clinical relapse; understanding the mechanisms
driving cellular escape from chemotherapy should lead to the development
of low toxicity, chronic treatment approaches that can be initiated
right after primary therapy to interrupt cell repopulation and disease
relapse by keeping it dormant and, therefore, subclinical.
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