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LINK . SPRINGER . COM {}

  1. Analyzed Page
  2. Matching Content Categories
  3. CMS
  4. Monthly Traffic Estimate
  5. How Does Link.springer.com Make Money
  6. Keywords
  7. Topics
  8. Schema
  9. External Links
  10. Analytics And Tracking
  11. Libraries
  12. CDN Services

We are analyzing https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00262-012-1387-1.

Title:
Circulating tumor cells as therapy-related biomarkers in cancer patients | Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
Description:
Carcinomas (tumors of epithelial origin) are responsible for most of all new cancers in the industrialized countries. Due to the high mortality rate caused by the metastatic spread of aggressive cancer cells, there is an urgent demand in finding new biomarkers, which should detect early formation of metastases and monitor efficacy of systemic adjuvant therapy in a timely manner. It has been considered that the molecular analysis of cells which are shed from tumors into the blood system (circulating tumor cells (CTCs)) might provide new insights for the clinical management of cancer, probably far earlier than using traditional high-resolution imaging technologies. Clinical trials indicated that CTCs can be deployed for diagnostic, monitoring, and prognostic purposes. Furthermore, these cells are discussed to be suitable as predictive markers. In any case, identification of CTCs requires innovative and challenging technologies as detection methods should be specific, sensitive, standardized, and highly reproducible. Although many different approaches have been developed until now, only the CellSearch™ method has been cleared by the American Food and Drug Administration. Although the detection of CTCs has already shown to have a prognostic impact in many tumor entities including breast, prostate, lung and colon cancer, ongoing and future studies are aimed to explore whether CTCs can be used for an individual therapy decision making including novel immunotherapeutic approaches. This review discusses (1) different detection strategies for CTCs, (2) their clinical impact, and (3) the potential use of CTCs guiding the treatment of individual cancer patients.
Website Age:
28 years and 1 months (reg. 1997-05-29).

Matching Content Categories {📚}

  • Health & Fitness
  • Science
  • Education

Content Management System {📝}

What CMS is link.springer.com built with?

Custom-built

No common CMS systems were detected on Link.springer.com, and no known web development framework was identified.

Traffic Estimate {📈}

What is the average monthly size of link.springer.com audience?

🌠 Phenomenal Traffic: 5M - 10M visitors per month


Based on our best estimate, this website will receive around 5,000,019 visitors per month in the current month.
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How Does Link.springer.com Make Money? {💸}

We don’t know how the website earns money.

The purpose of some websites isn't monetary gain; they're meant to inform, educate, or foster collaboration. Everyone has unique reasons for building websites. This could be an example. Link.springer.com might be cashing in, but we can't detect the method they're using.

Keywords {🔍}

cancer, article, cells, google, scholar, pubmed, circulating, tumor, cas, patients, breast, pantel, clin, res, clinical, metastatic, oncol, detection, cell, blood, ctcs, tumour, terstappen, research, epithelial, prostate, med, riethdorf, doyle, access, cristofanilli, survival, privacy, cookies, content, analysis, search, immunotherapy, biomarkers, review, gorges, early, therapy, relevance, rev, brandt, miller, ann, transition, peripheral,

Topics {✒️}

month download article/chapter her2-positive breast cancer castration-resistant prostate cancer cancer stem/progenitor cells microvortex-generating herringbone-chip circulating lung-cancer cells article cancer immunology de bono js therapy-related biomarkers epithelial-mesenchymal transition markers epcam-based detection due circulating tumour cells focussed research reviews full article pdf cancer metastasis rev early breast cancer disseminating tumour cells circulating tumor cells circulating cancer cells emerging tumor biomarkers single cancer cells molecular biomarker analyses viable dtcs/ctcs privacy choices/manage cookies metastatic breast cancer related subjects primary breast cancer circulating tumor dna disseminated tumor cells aggressive cancer cells disseminating cancer cells epithelial tumor cells detect early formation circulating melanoma cells european economic area breast cancer display nonmetastatic breast cancer individual cancer patients article gorges gorges & klaus pantel systemic adjuvant therapy metastatic colorectal cancer advanced prostate cancer breast cancer patients precision oncology adjuvant chemotherapy cancer immunotherapy hypoxia promotes dissemination cell search system single cell profiling

Schema {🗺️}

WebPage:
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         headline:Circulating tumor cells as therapy-related biomarkers in cancer patients
         description:Carcinomas (tumors of epithelial origin) are responsible for most of all new cancers in the industrialized countries. Due to the high mortality rate caused by the metastatic spread of aggressive cancer cells, there is an urgent demand in finding new biomarkers, which should detect early formation of metastases and monitor efficacy of systemic adjuvant therapy in a timely manner. It has been considered that the molecular analysis of cells which are shed from tumors into the blood system (circulating tumor cells (CTCs)) might provide new insights for the clinical management of cancer, probably far earlier than using traditional high-resolution imaging technologies. Clinical trials indicated that CTCs can be deployed for diagnostic, monitoring, and prognostic purposes. Furthermore, these cells are discussed to be suitable as predictive markers. In any case, identification of CTCs requires innovative and challenging technologies as detection methods should be specific, sensitive, standardized, and highly reproducible. Although many different approaches have been developed until now, only the CellSearch™ method has been cleared by the American Food and Drug Administration. Although the detection of CTCs has already shown to have a prognostic impact in many tumor entities including breast, prostate, lung and colon cancer, ongoing and future studies are aimed to explore whether CTCs can be used for an individual therapy decision making including novel immunotherapeutic approaches. This review discusses (1) different detection strategies for CTCs, (2) their clinical impact, and (3) the potential use of CTCs guiding the treatment of individual cancer patients.
         datePublished:2013-01-12T00:00:00Z
         dateModified:2013-01-12T00:00:00Z
         pageStart:931
         pageEnd:939
         sameAs:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-012-1387-1
         keywords:
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            EMT
            CTCs
            DTCs
            Metastasis
            Biomarker
            Oncology
            Immunology
            Cancer Research
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               name:Tobias M. Gorges
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      headline:Circulating tumor cells as therapy-related biomarkers in cancer patients
      description:Carcinomas (tumors of epithelial origin) are responsible for most of all new cancers in the industrialized countries. Due to the high mortality rate caused by the metastatic spread of aggressive cancer cells, there is an urgent demand in finding new biomarkers, which should detect early formation of metastases and monitor efficacy of systemic adjuvant therapy in a timely manner. It has been considered that the molecular analysis of cells which are shed from tumors into the blood system (circulating tumor cells (CTCs)) might provide new insights for the clinical management of cancer, probably far earlier than using traditional high-resolution imaging technologies. Clinical trials indicated that CTCs can be deployed for diagnostic, monitoring, and prognostic purposes. Furthermore, these cells are discussed to be suitable as predictive markers. In any case, identification of CTCs requires innovative and challenging technologies as detection methods should be specific, sensitive, standardized, and highly reproducible. Although many different approaches have been developed until now, only the CellSearch™ method has been cleared by the American Food and Drug Administration. Although the detection of CTCs has already shown to have a prognostic impact in many tumor entities including breast, prostate, lung and colon cancer, ongoing and future studies are aimed to explore whether CTCs can be used for an individual therapy decision making including novel immunotherapeutic approaches. This review discusses (1) different detection strategies for CTCs, (2) their clinical impact, and (3) the potential use of CTCs guiding the treatment of individual cancer patients.
      datePublished:2013-01-12T00:00:00Z
      dateModified:2013-01-12T00:00:00Z
      pageStart:931
      pageEnd:939
      sameAs:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-012-1387-1
      keywords:
         Cancer
         EMT
         CTCs
         DTCs
         Metastasis
         Biomarker
         Oncology
         Immunology
         Cancer Research
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                  name:University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
                  address:
                     name:Institute of Tumor Biology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
                     type:PostalAddress
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            name:Klaus Pantel
            affiliation:
                  name:University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
                  address:
                     name:Institute of Tumor Biology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
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External Links {🔗}(191)

Analytics and Tracking {📊}

  • Google Tag Manager

Libraries {📚}

  • Clipboard.js
  • Prism.js

CDN Services {📦}

  • Crossref

4.15s.