Cancer Medicine (Jul 2024)
Molecular subtypes of colorectal cancer in the era of precision oncotherapy: Current inspirations and future challenges
Abstract
Abstract Background Colorectal cancer (CRC) is among the most hackneyed malignancies. Even patients with identical clinical symptoms and the same TNM stage still exhibit radically different clinical outcomes after receiving equivalent treatment regimens, indicating extensive heterogeneity of CRC. Myriad molecular subtypes of CRC have been exploited for decades, including the most compelling consensus molecular subtype (CMS) classification that has been broadly applied for patient stratification and biomarker‐drug combination formulation. Encountering barriers to clinical translation, however, CMS classification fails to fully reflect inter‐ or intra‐tumor heterogeneity of CRC. As a consequence, addressing heterogeneity and precisely managing CRC patients with unique characteristics remain arduous tasks for clinicians. Review In this review, we systematically summarize molecular subtypes of CRC and further elaborate on their clinical applications, limitations, and future orientations. Conclusion In recent years, exploration of subtypes through cell lines, animal models, patient‐derived xenografts (PDXs), organoids, and clinical trials contributes to refining biological insights and unraveling subtype‐specific therapies in CRC. Therapeutic interventions including nanotechnology, clustered regulatory interspaced short palindromic repeat/CRISPR‐associated nuclease 9 (CRISPR/Cas9), gut microbiome, and liquid biopsy are powerful tools with the possibility to shift the immunologic landscape and outlook for CRC precise medicine.
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