Abstract
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a common form of urologic tumor that originates from the highly heterogeneous epithelium of renal tubules. Over the last decade, targeting therapies to renal cancer cells have transformed clinical care for RCC. Recently, it was proposed that renal cancer stem cells (CSCs) isolated from renal carcinomas were responsible for driving tumor growth and resistance to conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy, according to the theory of CSCs; this has provided the rationale for therapies targeting this aggressive cell population. Precise identification of renal CSC populations and the complete cell hierarchy will accurately inform characterization of disease subtypes. This will ultimately contribute to more personalized and targeted therapies. Here, we summarize potential targeting strategies for renal cancer cells and renal CSCs, including tyrosine kinase inhibitors, mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors (mTOR), interleukins, CSC marker inhibitors, bone morphogenetic protein-2, antibody drug conjugates, and nanomedicine. In conclusion, targeting therapies for RCC represent new directions for exploration and clinical investigation and they plant a seed of hope for advanced clinical care.
Highlights
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is not a single entity, but rather comprises a population of tumors that originate from the highly heterogeneous epithelium of renal tubules
It has been shown that renal carcinomas possess cancer stem cells (CSCs) with mesenchymal properties, and self-renewal and multi-differentiation properties, a definitive selection marker for their isolation and targeting remains to be found
Subpopulations of renal CSCs may coexist within a heterogeneous tumor, which means that renal CSC targeting therapy is a complicated science
Summary
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is not a single entity, but rather comprises a population of tumors that originate from the highly heterogeneous epithelium of renal tubules. Multiple studies have been designed to isolate and characterize the CSC population in RCC using stem cell markers, which are considered targets in CSC therapy.
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