| Literature DB >> 17912640 |
Abstract
Long-term estrogen deprivation treatment for breast cancer can, in some patients, lead to the activation of alternate cellular pathways, resulting in the re-emergence of the disease. This is a distressing scenario for oncologists and patients, but recent intensive molecular and biochemical studies are beginning to unravel these pathways, revealing opportunities for new targeted treatments. Far from making present therapies redundant, these new discoveries open the door to novel combination therapies that promise to provide enhanced efficacy or overcome treatment resistance. Letrozole, one of the most potent aromatase inhibitors, is the ideal candidate for combination therapy; indeed, it is one of the most intensively studied aromatase inhibitors in the evolving combinatorial setting. Complementary to the use of combination therapy is the development of molecular tools to identify patients who will benefit the most from these new treatments. Microarray gene profiling studies, designed to detect letrozole-responsive targets, are currently under way to understand how the use of the drug can be tailored more efficiently to specific patient needs.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17912640 PMCID: PMC2001220 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-007-9697-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Fig. 1Cross-talk between signal transduction pathways and ER signaling in endocrine resistant breast cancer, with opportunities for targeted intervention. Estrogen (E2)-liganded ER activates E2-regulated genes in classical pathway (thick black arrow), but following long-term tamoxifen therapy resistance can develop with bidirectional cross-talk (gray arrows) between ER and growth factor receptors, with association of membrane bound ER with growth factor receptors, and/or IGFR or EGFR/HER2 activation of ER phosphorylation. Stars show various targeted therapies. AI aromatase inhibitor, SERD selective estrogen receptor down-regulator, MoAb monoclonal antibodies, TKI tyrosine kinase inhibitor, FTI farnesyltransferase inhibitor, CCI cell cycle inhibitor. Reprinted from [28] with permission from the American Association for Cancer Research
Summary of letrozole in combination with growth factor signaling inhibitors in preclinical models
| Target for growth factor inhibitor | Combination regimen | Summary of key findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| EGFR/HER2 | Letrozole + AEE78 | Combination enhanced antiproliferative effects in MCF-7 (ER+ HER2−), ZR75.1 (ER+ HER2+), and BT474 (ER+ HER2+) cell lines | [ |
| Partial restoration of growth inhibitory effects of letrozole in refractory cell lines (LTLT-Ca; long-term letrozole treated) | [ | ||
| mTOR | Letrozole + RAD001 (everolimus) | Letrozole + RAD001 significantly increased apoptosis compared with either agent alone | [ |
| Co-treatment increased sensitivity to letrozole in resistant MCF-7 cells with constitutively active Akt | [ | ||
| RAD001 increased antiproliferative effects of letrozole in MCF-7 Arom 1 cell line | [ | ||
| IGFBP | Letrozole + rhIGFBP-3 | rhIGFBP-3 Enhanced letrozole activity in MCF-7-Ca cells in vitro and in vivo | [ |
rhIGFBP recombinant human insulin-like growth factor binding protein
Clinical studies of letrozole and inhibitors of growth factor signaling pathways
| Target for growth factor inhibitor | Combination regimen | Study type and patient population | Summary of key findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HER2 | Letrozole + trastuzumab | Phase II | ORR 26%; median TTP 5.8 months | [ |
| EGFR/HER2 | Letrozole + lapatinib | Phase I | Letrozole + lapatinib safely combined at recommended single agent doses | [ |
| Phase III | Ongoing trial; primary end point TTP | [ | ||
| mTOR | Letrozole + RAD-001 (everolimus) | Phase Ib | RAD001 pharmacokinetics not altered by letrozole | [ |
| Phase II | Ongoing trial of efficacy and biomarkers | [ | ||
| Letrozole + CCI-779 (temsirolimus) | Phase II | No difference in ORR, but trend to longer PFS with letrozole + temsirolimus (30 mg) | [ | |
| Phase III | Terminated | [ | ||
| Farnesyl transferase | Letrozole + tipifarnib | Randomized phase II | ORR 38% for letrozole and 26% for letrozole + tipifarnib (NS) | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled phase II | No longer recruiting | [ | ||
| VEGF | Letrozole + bevacizumab (anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody) | Phase II | Letrozole + bevacizumab is well-tolerated | [ |
| Endocrine therapy (tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitor) + bevacizumab | Phase III placebo-controlled | Planned trial | Planned CALGB trial [ | |
| Bcr-abl | Letrozole + imatinib | Phase II | Letrozole + imatinib is feasible | [ |
BC breast cancer, ORR overall response rate, TTP time to progression, PFS progression-free survival, AI aromatase inhibitor, TBC to be confirmed
Fig. 2Planned CALGB trial of first-line endocrine therapy (tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitor) with or without bevacizumab
Fig. 3Letrozole and lapatinib phase III trial design. Target recruitment: 1,280 patients