| Literature DB >> 23638435 |
Amos H P Loh1, Rachel C Brennan, Walter H Lang, Robert J Hickey, Linda H Malkas, John A Sandoval.
Abstract
Children with solid tumors represent a unique population. Recent improvements in pediatric solid tumor survival rates have been confined to low- and moderate-risk cancers, whereas minimal to no notable improvement in survival have been observed in high-risk and advanced-stage childhood tumors. Treatments for patients with advanced disease are rarely curative, and responses to therapy are often followed by relapse, which highlights the large unmet need for novel therapies. Recent advances in cancer treatment have focused on personalized therapy, whereby patients are treated with agents that best target the molecular drivers of their disease. Thus, a better understanding of the pathways that drive cancer or drug resistance is of critical importance. One such example is the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, which is activated in many solid cancer patients and represents a target for therapy. PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway activation has also been observed in tumors resistant to agents targeting upstream receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). Agents that target this pathway have the potential to shut down survival pathways, and are being explored both in the setting of pathway-activating mutations and for their ability to restore sensitivity to upstream signaling targeted agents. Here, we examine the role of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway in pediatric solid tumors, review the novel agents being explored to target this pathway, and explore the potential role of the inhibition of this pathway in the clinical development of these agents in children.Entities:
Keywords: Akt; PI3K; mTOR; pediatric solid tumors
Year: 2013 PMID: 23638435 PMCID: PMC3636761 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1The PI3K signaling pathway and the downstream targets of Akt.
Current pediatric clinical trials targeting the PI3K pathway.
| Drug | Mechanism | Study type | Study phase | Study aims/findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perifosine | Akt inhibition | Single agent dose escalation study (NCT00776867) | I | Determine molecular predictors of response (PI3K/AKT/mTOR and RAS/MAPK signaling, cell cycle markers) |
| Perifosine + Temsirolimus | Akt + mTOR inhibition | Single arm study (NCT01049841) | I | Establish preliminary data on efficacy of combination therapy; determine molecular predictors of response |
| MK-2206 | Akt (allosteric) inhibition | Dose escalation study followed by treatment at MTD (NCT01231919) | I/II | Evaluate biological activity in tumor and PBMC in recurrent or refractory leukemia, lymphoma or solid tumors |
| Everolimus | mTOR inhibition | Single agent dose escalation study (Fouladi et al., | I | MTD dose level correlated with degree of mTOR inhibition in PBMC |
| Deforolimus | mTOR inhibition | Single agent dose escalation study (Hartford et al., | I | Toxicity profile similar to other mTOR inhibitors; no objective disease responses seen |
| Ridaforolimus | mTOR inhibition | Single agent safety study (NCT01431534), and in combination with Dalotuzumab (NCT01431547) | I | Establish MTD, and recommended Phase 2 dose and potential efficacy of the combination therapy |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Single agent dose escalation study (Spunt et al., | I | Well tolerated; MTD not identified |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Single agent study (Geoerger et al., | II | Did not meet criteria to continue study as single agent; significant number with disease stabilization |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Combination therapy with Cixutumumab (Naing et al., | I | Well tolerated |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Combination therapy with liposomal Doxorubicin (Thornton et al., | I | MTD defined, toxicity profile acceptable; combination therapy increased exposure to the active metabolite of Temsirolimus |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Combination therapy with Cixutumumab (NCT01614795) | II | Evaluate IGF-1R, insulin receptor, ERK, RON, mTOR activation in refractory or recurrent sarcomas |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibition | Combination with Irinotecan, Temozolomide (NCT01141244/COG-ADVL0918) | I | In younger patients with recurrent or refractory solid tumors; establish MTD and efficacy of combination therapy |
| Rapamycin (Sirolimus) | mTOR inhibition | Combination with Topotecan, Cyclophosphamide (NCT01670175) | I | Determine dose-limiting toxicity, antitumor activity, biologic and anti-angiogenic effects of drug combination |
| Rapamycin (Sirolimus) | mTOR inhibition | Single arm efficacy study (NCT01265030) | I | Determine tolerability of preoperative administration in children and young adults with desmoid-type fibromatosis; evaluate disease recurrence, pain improvement, mTOR pathway activation |
| Rapamycin (Sirolimus) | mTOR inhibition | Combination with Vinblastine (NCT01135563) | I | In relapsed solid tumors including selected brain tumors and lymphoma; establish MTD and response to combination therapy |
| Enzastaurin | PKC-β inhibition | Fine et al. ( | II | In recurrent glioblastoma multiforme; good preliminary radiographic response |
| Enzastaurin | PKC-β inhibition | Randomized trial comparing Lomustine (Wick et al., | III | No significant differences on interim analysis; early study termination |
MTD, maximum-tolerated dose; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells.