4.7 Review

Cervical cancer heterogeneity: a constant battle against viruses and drugs

Journal

BIOMARKER RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40364-022-00428-7

Keywords

Human papillomavirus; Tumor heterogeneity; Tumor microenvironment; Drug resistance; Immunotherapy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81974414, 81772788, 81873430]

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Cervical cancer heterogeneity is crucial for effective prevention and treatment, involving aspects such as immune clearance of viruses, tumorigenesis, metastasis, and drug resistance. The combination of cervical cancer therapeutic vaccine and immune checkpoint inhibitors is an effective strategy to address treatment heterogeneity. Understanding global vaccination rates, screening rates, incidence, and mortality, as well as genomic factors, is important for cervical cancer prevention and control.
Cervical cancer is the first identified human papillomavirus (HPV) associated cancer and the most promising malignancy to be eliminated. However, the ever-changing virus subtypes and acquired multiple drug resistance continue to induce failure of tumor prevention and treatment. The exploration of cervical cancer heterogeneity is the crucial way to achieve effective prevention and precise treatment. Tumor heterogeneity exists in various aspects including the immune clearance of viruses, tumorigenesis, neoplasm recurrence, metastasis and drug resistance. Tumor development and drug resistance are often driven by potential gene amplification and deletion, not only somatic genomic alterations, but also copy number amplifications, histone modification and DNA methylation. Genomic rearrangements may occur by selection effects from chemotherapy or radiotherapy which exhibits genetic intra-tumor heterogeneity in advanced cervical cancers. The combined application of cervical cancer therapeutic vaccine and immune checkpoint inhibitors has become an effective strategy to address the heterogeneity of treatment. In this review, we will integrate classic and recently updated epidemiological data on vaccination rates, screening rates, incidence and mortality of cervical cancer patients worldwide aiming to understand the current situation of disease prevention and control and identify the direction of urgent efforts. Additionally, we will focus on the tumor environment to summarize the conditions of immune clearance and gene integration after different HPV infections and to explore the genomic factors of tumor heterogeneity. Finally, we will make a thorough inquiry into completed and ongoing phase III clinical trials in cervical cancer and summarize molecular mechanisms of drug resistance among chemotherapy, radiotherapy, biotherapy, and immunotherapy.

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