| Literature DB >> 20385023 |
J Rafael Sierra1, Virna Cepero, Silvia Giordano.
Abstract
In recent years, tyrosine kinases (TKs) have been recognized as central players and regulators of cancer cell proliferation, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, and are therefore considered suitable potential targets for anti-cancer therapies. Several strategies for targeting TKs have been developed, the most successful being monoclonal antibodies and small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors. However, increasing evidence of acquired resistance to these drugs has been documented, and extensive preclinical studies are ongoing to try to understand the molecular mechanisms by which cancer cells are able to bypass their inhibitory activity.This review intends to present the most recently identified molecular mechanisms that mediate acquired resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors, identified through the use of in vitro models or the analysis of patient samples. The knowledge obtained from these studies will help to design better therapies that prevent and overcome resistance to treatment in cancer patients.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20385023 PMCID: PMC2864216 DOI: 10.1186/1476-4598-9-75
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Major differences between monoclonal antibodies and small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
| mAb | Small molecule TKI | |
|---|---|---|
| Intravenous | Oral or parenteral | |
| Must be extracellular | Extra/intra-cellular | |
| US$ 4,200/month (trastuzumab) | US $1,800/month (gefitinib) | |
| ~150,000 daltons | ~400 daltons | |
| Near vessels, surrounding tumor area; inefficient delivery | Easy to diffuse, translocate though plasma membranes, may reach brain tissues | |
| Low toxicity | Mid-high toxicity | |
| Days-weeks | <72 h | |
| Disrupt ligand-receptor or receptor-receptor (homo/hetrodimerization) | Bind to target kinase(s), inhibit phosphorylation and downstream signaling pathways. Induce apoptosis. | |
| 18-24% | 5% | |
List of Monoclonal antibodies approved by FDA or undergoing clinical trials.
| Name of mAb | Commercial Name | Approval Year | Target Kinase | Mechanism of resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bevacizumab (Genentech/Roche) | Avastin | 2004 | VEGFR | 4 |
| Cetuximab (ImClone and Bristol-Myers Squibb) | Erbitux | 2004 | EGFR | 1,2,3,4 |
| Panitumumab (Amgen) | Vectibix | 2006 | EGFR | |
| Trastuzumab (Genentech) | Herceptin | 1998 | ERBB2 | 2,4,5 |
| IMC-A12 Cixutumumab | Phase II | IGF1-R | ||
| AVE1642 | Phase I | IGF1-R | ||
| Pertuzumab | Omnitarg | Phase III | ERBB2 | |
| MetMAb | Phase I/II | MET | ||
| IMC-1121B Ramucirumab | Phase III | VEGFR-2 | ||
| IMC-18F1 | Phase I | VEGFR | ||
| AMG-102 Rilotumumab (Amgen) | Phase II | MET |
Antibodies common name is followed by () that denotes producer. Mechanisms of resistance: 1) overexpression of alternative RTK, 2) expression of receptor variants, 3) overexpression of target protein, 4) developed new signaling pathways, 5) structure modification
Figure 1Schematic summary of the main molecular mechanisms of acquired resistance to TKIs.