It’s a wrap for 2021!
editorial
It’s a wrap for 2021!
In our Focus on 2021 in Review, the Nature Cancer team and leading experts look back at the biggest developments
for the cancer field over the past 12 months.
W
hat a year this has been!
Bookended by the rise of
new SARS-CoV-2 variants of
concern, distinguished by the rollout of
massive global vaccination campaigns,
marred by vaccine inequity and hesitancy,
and punctuated by COVID-19 surges, 2021
has been a rollercoaster year during which
the much-desired ‘return to normal’ has
remained unrealized. Nevertheless, despite
the many pandemic-related complications
that patients, clinicians and researchers have
continued to face, the cancer field has seen
remarkable progress over the past 12 months.
In this issue, we revisit the most striking
advances and biggest challenges for cancer
research and oncology during the past
year in our Focus on 2021 in Review. In
this dedicated Focus, we present specially
commissioned pieces that include news,
comment and analysis from leaders in the
cancer field, together with our editorial
team’s selected highlights from the cancer
literature and a collection of some of the
most popular Nature Cancer papers.
2021 has been a year of milestones. One
of these is the celebration of 50 years since
the National Cancer Act was signed into law
in the United States. We discuss the legacy
of this legislation for cancer research and
care, and the implications of the pandemic
for further progress with Ned Sharpless,
Director of the National Cancer Institute1.
The effect of the pandemic on cancer
research and patients with cancer is also
the focus of our discussion with Elisabete
Weiderpass2, Director of the International
Agency for Research on Cancer of the World
Health Organization. Taking a more focused
view, Pramesh et al.3 discuss how COVID19 has been affecting cancer care in India,
whereas Elie Dolgin4 covers the continued
challenges facing patients with cancer after
two years of pandemic-related complications
and despite the availability of vaccines.
On a more positive note, this year
we celebrate two other milestones: the
twentieth anniversary of the publication
of the human genome and 15 years since
the launch of The Cancer Genome Atlas
Program. Elaine Mardis5 discusses how
these efforts and advancing technologies
have fostered the development of the
thriving field of cancer genomics for
diagnosis and precision oncology. On the
theme of harnessing big data, Constance
Lehman and Shandong Wu6 highlight how
artificial intelligence is revolutionizing the
analysis of clinical cancer datasets and the
challenges of deeper integration of such
approaches in oncology. Continuing the
focus on technological advances, Song
Chen and Sarah Teichmann7 take a deep
dive into the unprecedented resolution
that single-cell multi-omics approaches are
providing in tumor profiling and cancer
heterogeneity in the pursuit of new and
improved therapies.
Indeed, 2021 has been an exciting year
for cancer therapy, as highlighted in Asher
Mullard’s article8 on key breakthroughs and
setbacks in the cancer drug pipeline over
the past 12 months. Rafael Rosell9 gives an
in-depth overview of one of these major
developments — the regulatory approval of
the first mutant KRAS inhibitor. The past
year has also witnessed exciting clinical
developments in the field of immunotherapy.
Caroline Robert10 discusses the promising
results of using anti-LAG-3 immune
checkpoint inhibitors as a combination
immunotherapy regimen in later-stage
clinical trials for melanoma. In addition,
Bullman et al.11 give their bench-to-bedside
perspective on early clinical trials of fecal
microbiota transplantation for improved
immunotherapy response in melanoma.
Finally, early-career investigators12
from around the globe provide the
human perspective on what this year has
Nature Cancer | VOL 2 | December 2021 | 1245 | www.nature.com/natcancer
been like for researchers on the ground,
by describing their experiences and
expectations for the future.
The enduring thematic threads that
run through these articles are the urgency
to improve outcomes, care and quality
of life for patients with cancer and the
ingenuity and dedication of cancer
researchers and clinicians in their efforts
to do so, even as we are about to enter the
third year of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Together with our editorially curated
highlights from the literature, published
in Nature Cancer and elsewhere, we hope
that our readers will find the content of
our Focus on 2021 in Review enlightening
about the current status of the cancer field
and inspiring about the year to come. We
thank our authors for their contributions
and wish you a happy, healthy and
successful 2022.
❐
Published online: 21 December 2021
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-00322-5
References
1. Zaromytidou, A.-I. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018021-00313-6 (2021).
2. Zaromytidou, A.-I. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-02100302-9 (2021).
3. Pramesh, C. S., Chinnaswamy, G., Sengar, M., Ranganathan, P.
& Badwe, R. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-02100290-w (2021).
4. Dolgin, E. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-003047 (2021).
5. Mardis, E. R. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-02100305-6 (2021).
6. Lehman, C. D. & Wu, S. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/
s43018-021-00307-4 (2021).
7. Chen, S. & Teichmann, S. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/
s43018-021-00306-5 (2021).
8. Mullard, A. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-02100303-8 (2021).
9. Rosell, R. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-002893 (2021).
10. Robert, C. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-002768 (2021).
11. Bullman, S., Eggermont, A., Johnston, C. D. & Zitvogel, L.
Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-00300-x (2021).
12. Akkari, L. et al. Nat. Cancer https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-02100294-6 (2021).
1245
(...truncated)