Resistance to anti-cancer drugs (drug resistance) can be defined in the laboratory
by the amount of anti-cancer drug that is required to produce a given level
of cell death (drug response). Clinical drug resistance can be defined either
as a lack of reduction of the size of a tumour following chemotherapy or as
the occurrence of clinical relapse after an initial ‘positive’ response
to anti-tumour treatment. Many studies of tumour samples do not directly measure
drug resistance in the laboratory (because it is difficult to perform functional
assays on tumour tissue); instead, key proteins or genes that are involved in
particular mechanisms of drug resistance have been proposed as ‘markers’
of drug resistance. In this review, we have focused on the problems that can
arise when attempts are made to relate the relevance of laboratory-identified
molecular mechanisms of drug resistance to anti-cancer drug resistance that
occurs in patients.