Circulating Nucleic Acids as Promising Biomarkers: A New Frontier of Personalized Medicine

Authors

  • Carolyn Skotz
  • Samrat Thapa
  • Mary Nowak
  • Hoc Lan Phung
  • Akshitha Mamidi
  • Hetu Patel
  • Mabel Ho

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52243/bptjm.v1i1.17

Keywords:

circulating DNA, ctDNA, microRNA, miRNA, non-small cell lung cancer, NSCLC, personalized medicine prognosis, liquid biopsy, molecular diagnostic testing, biomarker

Abstract

Biomarkers are a range of biological signals that measure the presence and severity of the disease. This literature review assesses circulating DNA (ctDNA) and microRNA (miRNA) biomarkers detected in liquid and tissue biopsies and their importance in the prognosis, outcomes, and treatments for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). These biomarkers have the potential for clinical use; however, further studies with requisite data and sufficiently large trials are required to refine our understanding of their applicability. The prognostic significance of ctDNA and miRNA biomarkers in NSCLC care has demonstrated that liquid biopsy and molecular diagnostic testing may provide a feasible and noninvasive method for tailoring treatment plans to the specific mutational landscape of diverse NSCLC patients. However, further testing must be conducted to analyze the significance and benefit of ctDNA and miRNA biomarkers in larger cohorts and substantiate the standardization of liquid biopsy in clinical practice.

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Circulating DNA and microRNA are useful biomarkers in non-small cell lung cancer prognosis and treatment

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Published

2021-12-18

How to Cite

Skotz, C., Thapa, S., Nowak, M., Phung, H. L., Mamidi, A., Patel, H., & Ho, M. (2021). Circulating Nucleic Acids as Promising Biomarkers: A New Frontier of Personalized Medicine. Berkeley Pharma Tech Journal of Medicine, 1(1), 116–155. https://doi.org/10.52243/bptjm.v1i1.17

Issue

Section

Scientific Review Papers