| Literature DB >> 22577336 |
Chandhanarat Chandhanayingyong1, Yuhree Kim, J Robert Staples, Cody Hahn, Francis Youngin Lee.
Abstract
The introduction of cytotoxic chemotherapeutic drugs in the 1970's improved the survival rate of patients with bone sarcomas and allowed limb salvage surgeries. However, since the turn of the century, survival data has plateaued for a subset of metastatic, nonresponding osteo, and/or Ewing sarcomas. In addition, most high-grade chondrosarcoma does not respond to current chemotherapy. With an increased understanding of molecular pathways governing oncogenesis, modern targeted therapy regimens may enhance the efficacy of current therapeutic modalities. Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases (MAPK)/Extracellular-Signal-Regulated Kinases (ERK) are key regulators of oncogenic phenotypes such as proliferation, invasion, angiogenesis, and inflammatory responses; which are the hallmarks of cancer. Consequently, MAPK/ERK inhibitors have emerged as promising therapeutic targets for certain types of cancers, but there have been sparse reports in bone sarcomas. Scattered papers suggest that MAPK targeting inhibits proliferation, local invasiveness, metastasis, and drug resistance in bone sarcomas. A recent clinical trial showed some clinical benefits in patients with unresectable or metastatic osteosarcomas following MAPK/ERK targeting therapy. Despite in vitro proof of therapeutic concept, there are no sufficient in vivo or clinical data available for Ewing sarcomas or chondrosarcomas. Further experimental and clinical trials are awaited in order to bring MAPK targeting into a clinical arena.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22577336 PMCID: PMC3345255 DOI: 10.1155/2012/404810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Figure 1MAPK/ERK signaling and the hallmarks of cancers. The MAPK/ERK pathway mediates several upstream signals from well-known oncogenic growth factors and proinflammatory stimulants. Activation of the MAPK/ERK pathway by growth factors, proinflammatory stimulants and gain-of-function mutations of Ras/Raf promotes phenotypic changes characteristic of cancer cells [9–14].
Figure 2MAPK/ERK signaling in osteosarcomas, Ewing sarcomas, and chondrosarcomas.
Therapeutic implications of Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK targeting in bone sarcomas.
| Sarcoma types | Study design | Target | Inhibitor types | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| pERK1/2 | MEK inhibitor (PD98059) | Prolonged survival increase chemosensitivity | [ | |
| Osteosarcoma |
| pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Growth inhibition | [ |
|
| pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Decrease lung metastasis antitumoral activity | [ | |
| Clinical Trial (Phase II) ( | pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Clinical benefit (PR + MR + SD) >6 months = 29% | [ | |
|
| pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Growth inhibition | [ | |
| Ewing's sarcoma |
| pERK1/2 | U0126 | Increase chemosensitivity | [ |
| Clinical trial (Phase I) ( | pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Not reported (ongoing) | [ | |
| Chondrosarcoma | Clinical trial (Phase II) ( | pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Prolonged stable disease | [ |
| Clinical trial (Phase II) ( | pERK1/2 | RAF inhibitors (Sorafenib) | Prolonged stable disease for >6 months | [ |
PR: Partial response; MR: Minor response; SD: Stable disease, *Human sarcoma xenografts in mice.