| Literature DB >> 21819606 |
Evgeny N Imyanitov1, Vladimir M Moiseyenko.
Abstract
Tumors arising in patients with hereditary cancer syndromes may have distinct drug sensitivity as compared to their sporadic counterparts. Breast and ovarian neoplasms from BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers are characterized by deficient homologous recombination (HR) of DNA, that makes them particularly sensitive to platinum compounds or inhibitors of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Outstandingly durable complete responses to high dose chemotherapy have been observed in several cases of BRCA-related metastatic breast cancer (BC). Multiple lines of evidence indicate that women with BRCA1-related BC may derive less benefit from taxane-based treatment than other categories of BC patients. There is virtually no reports directly assessing drug response in hereditary colorectal cancer (CRC) patients; studies involving non-selected (i.e., both sporadic and hereditary) CRC with high-level microsatellite instability (MSI-H) suggest therapeutic advantage of irinotecan. Celecoxib has been approved for the treatment of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). Hereditary medullary thyroid cancers (MTC) have been shown to be highly responsive to a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor vandetanib, which exerts specific activity towards mutated RET receptor. Given the rapidly improving accessibility of DNA analysis, it is foreseen that the potential predictive value of cancer-associated germ-line mutations will be increasingly considered in the future studies.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21819606 PMCID: PMC3171323 DOI: 10.1186/1897-4287-9-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hered Cancer Clin Pract ISSN: 1731-2302 Impact factor: 2.857
Drug sensitivity of breast-ovarian cancer syndrome related tumors: preclinical evidence
| Study | Study design and main findings |
|---|---|
| Husain et al. [ | Antisense inhibition of |
| Bhattacharyya et al. [ | |
| Brodie et al. [ | Cell lines, which were generated from mammary tumors growing in genetically engineered |
| Lafarge et al. [ | Inhibition of |
| Moynahan et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Mullan et al. [ | Tetracycline regulated inducible expression of |
| Fedier et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Quinn et al. [ | |
| Tassone et al. [ | |
| Zhou et al. [ | SNU251 ovarian cancer cell line carrying truncation of 49 C-terminal aminoacids of the |
| Farmer et al. [ | siRNA directed or chemical inhibition of PARP profoundly inhibited clonogenicity of |
| Tassone et al. [ | |
| Yun et al. [ | |
| Bartz et al. [ | |
| Chabalier et al. [ | siRNA-directed inactivation of |
| Xing and Orsulic [ | |
| Donawho et al. [ | Veliparib potentiated inhibitory effect of cisplatin, carboplatin and cyclophosphamide towards human |
| Rottenberg et al. [ | Doxorubicin, docetaxel and cisplatin inhibited growth of mammary tumors in genetically engineered |
| Treszezamsky et al. [ | |
| Yamane et al. [ | |
| Shafee et al. [ | Cisplatin caused marked regression of |
| Rottenberg et al. [ | Olaparib inhibited growth of mammary tumors in genetically engineered |
| Promkan et al. [ | shRNA-directed inhibition of |
| Santarosa et al. [ | Antisense inhibition of |
| Tassone et al. [ | Cisplatin induced almost complete growth inhibition of HCC1937-derived ( |
| Zander et al. [ | Topotecan inhibited growth of mammary tumors in genetically engineered |
| Drew et al. [ | AG014699 (PARP inhibitor) was highly cytotoxic against breast cancer cells with mutationally inactivated (MDA-MB-436) or epigenetically silenced (UACC3199) |
| Goldberg et al. [ | Nanoparticle-mediated delivery of PARP1-specific siRNA inhibited growth of |
| Abbott et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Yu et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Rahden-Staron et al, [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Samouelian et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| van der Heijden et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of |
| Bryant et al. [ | Chemical inhibition of PARP profoundly inhibited clonogenicity of |
| Farmer et al. [ | siRNA directed or chemical inhibition of PARP profoundly inhibited clonogenicity of |
| Gallmeier and Kern [ | |
| van der Heijden et al. [ | |
| Bartz et al. [ | |
| Treszezamsky et al. [ | |
| Evers et al. [ | Olaparib, cisplatin, mitomycin C and temozolomide effectively inhibited growth of |
| Hay et al. [ | |
| Evers et al. [ | High-throughput pharmaceutical screen involving |
| Issaeva et al. [ | Chemical library screen identified 6-thioguanine as the most potent inhibitor of the survival of |
| Drew et al. [ | AG014699 (PARP inhibitor) was highly cytotoxic against |
| Kortmann et al. [ | |
| Villarroel et al. [ | High sensitivity of |
| McCabe et al. [ | RNA-interference driven inhibition of |
| Bartz et al. [ | |
Drug sensitivity of breast-ovarian cancer syndrome related tumors: clinical evidence
| Study | Study design and main findings1 |
|---|---|
| Kloos et al. [ | 15 |
| Chappuis et al. [ | 7 |
| Warner et al. [ | Rapid radiological disappearance and complete pathological response in a |
| Petit et al. [ | 55 triple-negative BC treated by neoadjuvant FEC. The subgroup of |
| Chrisanthar et al. [ | 2/3 (67%) |
| Hubert et al. [ | 15 |
| Melichar et al. [ | Case report on 2 related |
| Wysocki et al. [ | 19 non-responders to docetaxel have been analyzed; 5 (26%) of them turned out to be |
| Fong et al. [ | Phase I study dose escalation study for olaparib. 3 |
| Fourquet et al. [ | Higher rate of cCR to anthracycline-based neoadjuvant therapy in |
| Huang et al. [ | Case report: metastatic breast cancer in a |
| Kriege et al. [ | 93 |
| Rhiem et al. [ | Case report: major response of heavily pretreated metastatic |
| Vollebergh et al. [ | Long term outcome of high dose therapy (carboplatin, thiotepa and cyclophosphamide) is analyzed in 40 patients with metastatic breast cancer. 6 patients remained on complete remission at the time of the analysis (56+ - 150+ months); all these 6 patients demonstrated chromosomal imbalances characteristic for |
| Byrski et al. [ | 102 |
| Moiseyenko et al. [ | Case-report: lack of response of a chemonaive |
| Silver et al. [ | 28 stage II or III triple-negative breast cancers were treated by 4 cycles of neoadjuvant cisplatin monotherapy. Two |
| Kriege et al. [ | 32 |
| Tutt et al. [ | |
| Sokolenko et al. [ | 5 |
| Cass et al. [ | 34 |
| Tan et al. [ | Therapy response was compared in 22 |
| Fong et al. [ | Phase I study dose escalation study for olaparib. 15 |
| Leunen et al. [ | 6 patients with relapsed |
| Melichar et al. [ | Case report on a |
| Audeh et al. [ | |
| Fong et al. [ | Phase I dose escalation and single-stage expansion trial for olaparib, given to 50 patients (including 41 |
| Moiseyenko et al. [ | Complete clinical response and nearly-complete pathological response of bulky tumor treated by 5 cycles of single-agent cisplatin. |
| Vencken et al. [ | 93 |
| Chalasani et al. [ | Case report on a |
| James et al. [ | Case report on a |
| Villarroel et al. [ | Case report on a |
| Fogelman et al. [ | Case report on a |
| Fong et al. [ | Phase I study dose escalation study for olaparib. 1 |
| Moule et al. [ | Case report: complete response lasting for 10+ years in a |
| Vesprini et al. [ | Case report describing a patient with metastatic |
1Drug combinations: CMF: cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and fluorouracil; AC: doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide; FAC: 5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide; FEC: 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide.
Treatment outcomes: OR: objective response; PR: partial response; CR: complete response; cCR: clinical complete response; pCR: pathological complete response; SD: stable disease; PD: progressive disease; PFS: progression-free survival; OS: overall survival.