Investigator

Aruni Ghose

Clinical Research Fellow · Mount Vernon Cancer Centre, Medical Oncology

Research Interests

AGAruni Ghose
Papers(2)
Hereditary Ovarian Ca…Recent Insights into …
Collaborators(5)
Stergios BoussiosIshika MahajanSyed Ahmer RazaAnita BolinaAntonios Revythis
Institutions(5)
Barts Health Nhs TrustMedway Nhs Foundation…Apollo Proton Cancer …Guys And St Thomas Nh…Clatterbridge Cancer …

Papers

Hereditary Ovarian Cancer: Towards a Cost-Effective Prevention Strategy

Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynaecological malignancy. The search for a widely affordable and accessible screening strategy to reduce mortality from OC is still ongoing. This coupled with the late-stage presentation and poor prognosis harbours significant health-economic implications. OC is also the most heritable of all cancers, with an estimated 25% of cases having a hereditary predisposition. Advancements in technology have detected multiple mutations, with the majority affecting the BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 genes. Women with BRCA mutations are at a significantly increased lifetime risk of developing OC, often presenting with a high-grade serous pathology, which is associated with higher mortality due to its aggressive characteristic. Therefore, a targeted, cost-effective approach to prevention is paramount to improve clinical outcomes and mortality. Current guidelines offer multiple preventive strategies for individuals with hereditary OC (HOC), including genetic counselling to identify the high-risk women and risk-reducing interventions (RRI), such as surgical management or chemoprophylaxis through contraceptive medications. Evidence for sporadic OC is abundant as compared to the existing dearth in the hereditary subgroup. Hence, our review article narrates an overview of HOC and explores the RRI developed over the years. It attempts to compare the cost effectiveness of these strategies with women of the general population in order to answer the crucial question: what is the most prudent clinically and economically effective strategy for prevention amongst high-risk women?

Recent Insights into PARP and Immuno-Checkpoint Inhibitors in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian cancer is one of the most common gynecologic cancers and has the highest mortality rate of any other cancer of the female reproductive system. Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) accounts for approximately 90% of all ovarian malignancies. The standard therapeutic strategy includes cytoreductive surgery accompanied by pre- or postoperative platinum-based chemotherapy. Nevertheless, up to 80% of the patients relapse within the following 12–18 months from the completion of the treatment and then receive first-line chemotherapy depending on platinum sensitivity. Mutations in BRCA1/2 genes are the most significant molecular aberrations in EOC and serve as prognostic and predictive biomarkers. Poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors exploit defects in the DNA repair pathway through synthetic lethality. They have also been shown to trap PARP1 and PARP2 on DNA, leading to PARP-DNA complexes. Olaparib, rucaparib, and niraparib have all obtained Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and/or the European Medicine Agency (EMA) approval for the treatment of EOC in different settings. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) have improved the survival of several cancers and are under evaluation in EOC. However, despite the success of immunotherapy in other malignancies, the use of antibodies inhibiting the immune checkpoint programmed cell death (PD-1) or its ligand (PD-L1) obtained modest results in EOC so far, with median response rates of up to 10%. As such, ICI have not yet been approved for the treatment of EOC. We herein provided a comprehensive insight into the most recent progress in synthetic lethality PARP inhibitors, along with the mechanisms of resistance. We also summarised data regarding the role of immune checkpoint inhibitors, the use of vaccination therapy, and adoptive immunotherapy in treating epithelial ovarian cancer.

40Works
2Papers
5Collaborators
Prostatic NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorOvarian NeoplasmsNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalSpinal NeoplasmsPrognosisNeoplasms

Positions

2021–

Clinical Research Fellow

Mount Vernon Cancer Centre · Medical Oncology

2021–

Clinical Academic

Barts Health NHS Trust · Solid Tumour Oncology

2021–

Clinical Academic

Barts Cancer Institute

2020–

Clinical Fellow

Medway NHS Foundation Trust

Education

2019

M.B.B.S

Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital

Country

GB