Advancing precision medicine in pancreatic cancer using novel biomarkers and clinical targets.
Precision-guided therapy is imperative in the battle against pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), one of the most lethal solid malignancies with limited improvements in survival despite advances i
APA
Murthy D, Seyhan AA, et al. (2026). Advancing precision medicine in pancreatic cancer using novel biomarkers and clinical targets.. Molecular aspects of medicine, 109, 101476. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mam.2026.101476
MLA
Murthy D, et al.. "Advancing precision medicine in pancreatic cancer using novel biomarkers and clinical targets.." Molecular aspects of medicine, vol. 109, 2026, pp. 101476.
PMID
42008879
Abstract
Precision-guided therapy is imperative in the battle against pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), one of the most lethal solid malignancies with limited improvements in survival despite advances in molecular profiling and systemic therapy. While oncogenic drivers such as KRAS, TP53, CDKN2A, and SMAD4 are nearly ubiquitous, their translation into effective targeted therapies has been constrained by profound tumor heterogeneity, a therapy-resistant tumor microenvironment (TME), and a paucity of predictive biomarkers. In parallel, clinical outcomes are increasingly shaped by extrinsic modifiers, including metabolic disease, chronic inflammation, and microbiome dysregulation, which remain under-integrated into current treatment paradigms. Recent progress in precision oncology has enabled regulatory approval of biomarker-defined therapies for select PDAC subsets, including immune checkpoint inhibitors for mismatch repair-deficient tumors, PARP inhibitors for BRCA1/2-mutant disease, and combination cytotoxic regimens such as NALIRIFOX in the metastatic setting. However, these advances benefit only a minority of patients, underscoring the urgent need for improved patient stratification and rational combination strategies. Emerging clinical and translational studies highlight the promise of integrating multi-omic profiling, liquid biopsies, functional precision models (organoids and patient-derived xenografts), and artificial intelligence-driven analytics to uncover actionable vulnerabilities, monitor response, and guide adaptive trial design. In this review, we critically evaluate the clinical relevance of molecular, metabolic, and microenvironmental determinants of PDAC progression and therapeutic resistance. We focus on translational bottlenecks that have limited clinical success to date and highlight biomarker-driven strategies, ongoing clinical trials, and emerging technologies poised to shift treatment from uniform algorithms toward biologically informed, patient-specific therapeutic approaches in pancreatic cancer.