Clinical Importance of Molecular Biomarkers in Pleural Mesothelioma.
Pleural mesothelioma (PM) is a rare malignancy with opportunities for improvement in current treatment paradigms despite recent advances in systemic therapy.
APA
Roof L, Koehler K, Verschraegen C (2026). Clinical Importance of Molecular Biomarkers in Pleural Mesothelioma.. Cancers, 18(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18040679
MLA
Roof L, et al.. "Clinical Importance of Molecular Biomarkers in Pleural Mesothelioma.." Cancers, vol. 18, no. 4, 2026.
PMID
41749932
Abstract
Pleural mesothelioma (PM) is a rare malignancy with opportunities for improvement in current treatment paradigms despite recent advances in systemic therapy. While histology remains the most clinically relevant prognostic indicator, the expanding use of immunotherapy and ongoing clinical trials involving targeted therapies have increased interest in the development of predictive and prognostic biomarkers in this disease. This review summarizes the current biologic and therapeutic landscape of PM and the biomarkers that influence prognosis and treatment response. Biomarkers such as programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression and tumor mutational burden (TMB) demonstrate inconsistent predictive value in PM and are not currently used in clinical decision pathways in the real-world setting. This review highlights the developing role of dynamic biomarkers such as circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) for molecular response assessment and minimal residual disease (MRD) detection. This review also examines important genomic and transcriptomic alterations in PM, such as MTAP, BAP1, CDKN2A, and NF2/YAP/TEAD. These alterations provide potential targets for ongoing early-phase clinical trials. Future advances in PM will depend on the development and integration of comprehensive biomarker models that combine clinicopathologic, immune, and molecular features of this complex and heterogenous disease.