Cancer Control (Jun 2024)

A Review: Genetic Mutations as a Key to Unlocking Drug Resistance in Cervical Cancer

  • Carla Eksteen PhD,
  • Johann Riedemann PhD, MBChB,
  • Atarah M Rass MSc,
  • Manisha du Plessis PhD,
  • Matthys H Botha PhD, MBChB,
  • Frederick H van der Merwe MBChB,
  • Anna-Mart Engelbrecht PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/10732748241261539
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31

Abstract

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Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women. Advanced stage and metastatic disease are often associated with poor clinical outcomes. This substantiates the absolute necessity for high-throughput diagnostic and treatment platforms that are patient and tumour specific. Cervical cancer treatment constitutes multimodal intervention. Systemic treatments such as chemotherapy and/or focal radiotherapy are typically applied as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant strategies. Cisplatin constitutes an integral part of standard cervical cancer treatment approaches. However, despite initial patient response, de novo or delayed/acquired treatment resistance is often reported, and toxicity is of concern. Chemotherapy resistance is associated with major alterations in genomic, metabolomic, epigenetic and proteomic landscapes. This results in imbalanced homeostasis associated with pro-oncogenic and proliferative survival, anti-apoptotic benefits, and enhanced DNA damage repair processes. Although significant developments in cancer diagnoses and treatment have been made over the last two decades, drug resistance remains a major obstacle to overcome.