| Literature DB >> 22091418 |
Susy M E Scholl1, Gemma Kenter, Christian Kurzeder, Philippe Beuzeboc.
Abstract
Multiple genetic abnormalities will have occurred in advanced cervical cancer and multiple targeting is likely to be needed to control tumor growth. To date, dominant therapeutic targets under scrutiny for cervical cancer treatment have been EGFR pathway and angiogenesis inhibition as well as anti-HPV vaccines. The potentially most effective targets to be blocked may be downstream from the membrane receptor or at the level of the nucleus. Alterations of the pathways involved in DNA repair and in checkpoint activations, as well as the specific site of HPV genome integration, appear worth assessing. For genetic mutational analysis, complete exon sequencing may become the norm in the future but at this stage frequent mutations (that matter) can be verified by PCR analysis. A precise documentation of relevant alterations of a large spectrum of protein biomarkers can be carried out by reverse phase protein array (RPPA) or by multiplex analysis. Clinical decision-making on the drug(s) of choice as a function of the biological alteration will need input from bio-informatics platforms as well as novel statistical designs. Endpoints are yet to be defined such as the loss (or reappearance) of a predictive biomarker. Single or dual targeting needs to be explored first in relevant preclinical animal and in xenograft models prior to clinical deployment.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22091418 PMCID: PMC3195803 DOI: 10.5402/2011/403098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Oncol ISSN: 2090-5661
Ongoing trials with targeted agents.
| Products | Trial | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | CDDP-Paclitaxel versus Topotecan-Paclitaxel ± bevacizumab | GOG 204 |
| 2 | Poly tki (pazopanib) versus EGFR/HER2 dual inhibitor (lapatinib) | VEG 105281 |
| 3 | VEGF and FGF2 inhibitor: Brivanib | 227G |
| 4 | EGFR inhibitor erlotinib | GOG 227 D |
| 5 | EGFR-targeted antibody cetuximab | GOG 227 E |
| 6 | EGFR inhibition by cetuximab + CDDP | GOG 76DD |
| 7 | Vaccine: listeriolysin O E7 fusion peptide: ADXS11: | GOG 285 |
| 8 | G1 checkpoint modulation, MK1775*, inhibitor of Wee1 kinase activity | GOG 265 |
| 9 | Treatment with oncolytic viruses: PV701** | PV701 |
| 10 | Farletuzumab and folate receptor antibody coupled to vinca drug*** |
*Inhibitor of Wee 1 kinase activity promotes apoptosis when p53 is null.
**Targets defect in interferon pathway (pathway disabled by HPV E6 and E7).
***Folate receptor expressed in 1/3 of (most aggressive) cervical cancers.
Figure 1Pathway convergences and intercept nodes. This figure serves to illustrate somewhat the complexity of pathway interactions; it is not meant to be an exhaustive documentation of interactions. It is based on the references in this paper.
Potential biomarkers according to pathway.
| Pathway activation | Reagents | Diagnostic or predictive biomarkers under scrutiny |
|---|---|---|
| PI3K/PTEN* | PI3K inhibitors: PI103, BGT226 mTor inhibitors: temsirolimus, everolimus, ridaforolimas | ? pERK |
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| Ras/raf pathway** | Ras inhibitors: tipifanib, lonafnaib | tbd |
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| HIF-1 | Bevacizumab, VEG105281, Brivanib, Sunitinib, AZD2171 | Tbd |
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| G1 checkpoint | Checkpoint inhibitor: MK1775*** | ? p53, p63, p73 |
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| Apoptosis***** | ? Anti HPV vaccine indicated here | ? p53, p63, p73; |
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| DNArepair: homologous recombination deficient | PARP inhibitors | ? DNA damage control deficiency/Homologous recombination |
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| Jak/stat | ? PV-701 (oncolytic virus) targets interferon | ? IL8 (−) |
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| TGF | ? | ?IL10, TGF |
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| Adhesion | ? | Tbd |
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| Hedgehog | BMS-83392, IPI 926, LDE225, LEQ 506, GDC-0449, PF 04449913, TAK 441, | Tbd |
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| Wnt/ | Wnt1, Wnt2: neutralizing antibodies AINS, Vit D | |
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| Notch | Neutralizing Antibodies against ligand | Tbd, ? AKT |
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| — | Farletuzumab | Folate receptor |
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| — | Folate receptor coupled to vinca drug | Folate receptor |
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| Neighboring cells | Active on tumour micro-environment | Tbd |
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| Multi pathway inhibitors | Pazopanib****** | Tbd |
*PIK3 amplification or mutational activation or PTEN loss. Activation of the PIK3/AKT/mTOR pathway was associated with a worse prognosis and chemoresistance in cervical cancers [78].
“?” means not validated.
**Ras/raf pathway alterations in colon cancer render these tumours resistant to an EGFR inhibitor. Ras inhibitors such as Tipifanib or lonafanib did not show relevant clinical activity in phase II and III studies in various tumour types [79] and may be worth assessing again in single and dual targeting in selected preclinical models. ***E6 mediated inactivation of p53 upregulates VEGF and angiogenesis. ****Retinoic acid and topotecan may be useful in tumours with checkpoint activation [80]. *****There is evidence that human papillomavirus infection enhances phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein and decreases apoptosis in a particularly aggressive type of squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix [20–23]. ******Wnt/β Catenin inhibition: by antibodies [81–83], AINS, [84–86], VitD3 [87], or small molecules [88–90] or oncolytic viruses [91]. Also antisense, molecule to end product c-myce [92].