Hematology/oncology clinics of North America
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Hematol. Oncol. Clin. North Am. · Oct 2002
Review Case ReportsTargeting the molecular pathophysiology of gastrointestinal stromal tumors with imatinib. Mechanisms, successes, and challenges to rational drug development.
The development of imatinib as molecularly targeted therapy for GIST represents an important case study of rational drug development. It is a paradigm of how the molecular understanding of a cancer has resulted in a new effective therapy that targets the critical pathway upon which the GIST cells were dependent: the uncontrollably active KIT signaling pathway. Unresectable or metastatic GISTs have traditionally exhibited a rapid and fatal clinical course, with no evidence of benefit from any standard cytotoxic chemotherapy. ⋯ Imatinib therapy can induce objective responses and stabilization of disease and can provide clinical benefit in the majority of GIST patients treated with the drug. Other strategies are beginning to be explored, such as the use of imatinib earlier the in course of GIST (e.g., as adjuvant therapy after definitive surgical resection of early-stage disease). Integration of signal transduction inhibitors into the armamentarium of cancer therapeutics will undoubtedly continue based on this important paradigm of GIST.