1932

Abstract

The basic catalog of DNA-based alterations that contribute to the onset and progression of cancer has been largely elucidated due to the results obtained from the combination of massively parallel sequencing and computational analysis methods applied to thousands of cancer samples. These combined approaches have provided novel and surprising insights into the myriad ways that DNA-level disruptions lead to activation and inactivation of cellular pathways, thereby altering the carefully controlled growth and division of normal cells and rendering them cancerous. This review presents genomic insights gained from these large-scale studies and highlights how this new knowledge will be translated in the future into improved clinical care and monitoring of cancer patients.

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/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-cancerbio-050216-122035
2018-03-04
2024-03-29
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