| Literature DB >> 21050423 |
Abstract
Resistance to chemotherapy is a major obstacle to the effective treatment of many tumor types. Although many anticancer therapies can alter tumor growth, in most cases the effect is not long lasting. Consequently, there is a significant need for new agents with low susceptibility to common drug resistance mechanisms in order to improve response rates and potentially extend survival. Approximately 30% of the women diagnosed with early-stage disease in turn progress to metastatic breast cancer, for which therapeutic options are limited. Current recommendations for first-line chemotherapy include anthracycline-based regimens and taxanes (paclitaxel and docetaxel). They typically give response rates of 30 to 70% but the responses are often not durable, with a time to progression of 6 to 10 months. Patients with progression or resistance may be administered capecitabine, gemcitabine, vinorelbine, albumin-bound paclitaxel, or ixabepilone, while other drugs are being evaluated. Response rates in this setting tend to be low (20 to 30%); the median duration of responses is <6 months and the results do not always translate into improved long-term outcomes. The present article reviews treatment options in taxane-resistant metastatic breast cancer and the role of ixabepilone in this setting.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21050423 PMCID: PMC2972556 DOI: 10.1186/bcr2573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Mechanisms of drug resistance in breast cancer [24,25]
| Class of resistance | Drug examples |
|---|---|
| Drug transport/sequestration | ABC transporters: P-glycoprotein, multidrug-resistant protein 1 (breast cancer resistance protein) |
| Modification of drug target (qualitative and quantitative) | Dihydrofolate reductase, epidermal growth factor receptor; C-KIT mutations; tubulin |
| DNA repair/genomic instability | Mismatch repair proteins; caspases, PTEN; p27; microsatellite instability, loss of heterozygosity, topoisomerase I, topoisomerase II |
| Regulators of apoptosis | p53; PTEN; Bcl-2, Bcl-x |
| Drug metabolism/inactivation | Cytochrome P450; glutathione S-transferase; aldehyde dehydrogenase |
ABC, ATP-binding cassette; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10.
Role of β-tubulin in drug resistance
| Altered expression of β-tubulin isotypes [ |
| Overexpression of the βIII-tubulin subunit [ |
| β-Tubulin mutations affecting microtubule stability and the binding of microtubule inhibitors [ |
| Changes in microtubule-associated proteins (for example, tau and microtubule-associated protein-4) [ |
| Post-translational modifications of tubulin (for example, acetylation) [ |
Preclinical activity of ixabepilone in drug-resistant cancer
| Active against numerous drug-resistant tumor cell lines, including human paclitaxel-resistant breast cancer cell lines and xenografts [ |
| Inhibitory activity in breast cancers with primary or acquired resistance [ |
| Low susceptibility to multiple mechanisms of drug resistance [ |
| Multidrug resistance overexpression: overexpression of the βIII-tubulin isotype |
| Poor substrate for multidrug resistance; does not strongly induce P-glycoprotein expression [ |
Clinical trials of ixabepilone in drug-resistant metastatic breast cancer
| Trial 009, phase II [ | Resistant to taxane; prior treatment with anthracycline-based regimena | 49/49 | All had received ≥1 prior taxane-based regimen (31 % had ≥2 regimens); 98% had a taxane-containing regimen as their most recent MBC therapy, and 73% had progressed within 1 month of the last administered taxane dose | ORR 12%; 41 % stable disease |
| Trial 081, phase II [ | Resistant to an anthracycline, a taxane, and capecitabine | 113/126 | 77% with visceral disease in liver and/or lung; 88% had completed ≥2 prior chemotherapy regimens for MBC, 48% had ≥3 lines | ORR 11.5%; 50% stable disease |
| Trial 031, phase II [ | Anthracycline-pretreated or resistant and taxane-resistantb | 50/62 | 72% had baseline visceral metastases, 43% had ≥2 prior chemotherapy regimens in the metastatic setting for MBC | ORR 30%c; 32% stable disease |
| Trial 046, phase III [ | Pretreated with or resistant to anthracyclines and resistant to taxanesd | 737/752 | 65% had ≥3 metastatic disease sites; 48% had received ≥1 prior regimen for MBC; 85% had progressed on prior taxane therapy for metastatic disease | ORR 34.7% vs. 14.3% |
MBC, metastatic breast cancer; ORR, overall response rate; DOR, duration of response; TTP, time to progression (months); CI, confidence interval; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival. aPatients had progressed within 4 months of taxane therapy (6 months, if adjuvant therapy only) and had a taxane as their last chemotherapy regimen. bPatients were ineligible if they had received more than three prior chemotherapy regimens for metastatic disease. cAll responders had extensive metastatic disease at baseline. dResistance to anthracycline and taxane is defined as tumor progression during treatment or within 3 months of the last administered dose in the metastatic setting, or recurrence within 6 months in the neoadjuvant or adjuvant setting. This was subsequently revised to include recurrence within 4 months of the last administered dose in the metastatic setting or 12 months in an adjuvant setting. eP = 0.0003.
Figure 1Progression-free survival for patients treated with ixabepilone plus capecitabine. Kaplan-Meier progression-free survival curve from a phase III trial of ixabepilone plus capecitabine for metastatic breast cancer patients progressing after anthracycline and taxane treatment [88]. Reprinted with permission from Journal of Clinical Oncology.