Abstract
Improvement of established treatment strategies for cancer has resulted in increased survival times for patients with malignancies. However, success of surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy is limited, as even combined and repeated therapy regimens and high-dose chemotherapy can only reduce tumor burden by several logarithmic steps and are not able to completely eradicate all neoplastic cells. If clinically complete remission is achieved—that is, if no sign of the tumor is detectable by standard diagnostic procedures, remaining minimal residual disease (MRD) can eventually give rise to clinically manifest relapse. More sensitive methods are, therefore, necessary to detect single tumor cells for exact staging, to assess the metastatic potential of an individual tumor, to evaluate the sensitivity to prior therapy, and to detect MRD-positive patients with remaining malignant cells who are at higher risk for relapse. Novel treatment approaches must be created to eradicate minimal residual disease after conventional therapy.
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